The purpose of this pilot study was to gain a deeper understanding of how adolescents are affected by their mothers' breast cancer and to discover their opinions about how future intervention programs should be designed. Three focus groups were conducted with a total of 10 adolescents. Findings indicate that adolescents' lives had been complicated by their mothers' illness, as they often felt burdened with additional roles and responsibilities. Adolescents suggested that future intervention programs should have the following elements: Adolescent group comprised of boys and girls within 4 months of cancer diagnosis; psychoeducation; target coping skills sensitive to girls and boys of different ethnic and racial backgrounds; and after the adolescent groups, have multiple-family therapy groups that promote shared family understanding and open communication between parents and adolescents.
This article presents the results of a retrospective multiple-case pilot study (6 families: 4 Caucasian and 2 African American) designed to uncover how parents and their adolescent children (ages 11-18) were affected by non-terminal parental cancer, and how they adjusted to and coped with cancer. Drawing from phenomenology and the collective case study approach, findings suggest that parents were often unaware of the stress and overwhelming feelings of sadness and fear their adolescent children were experiencing. Often the adolescent children tried to protect their parents by not sharing their feelings openly with them; this was particularly so for the oldest offspring in the family. These findings provide important insights for healthcare professionals in serving this often-neglected population of families more effectively.
Three years after being interviewed, a nonrandom, purposeful subsample of 14 Jewish families from a larger sample of 48 families living in Central New York was reinterviewed. The primary aim of this follow-up study was to develop a descriptive understanding of parenting practices and the transmission of ethnic identity. Semistructured family interviews were conducted and coded using grounded-theory techniques, in particular the constant comparative method of analysis. Four main qualitative categories emerged from this study: Individual differences in teenagers, stages of ethnic identity development, parenting practices, and parental role models. Findings suggest that clear expectations, a type of authoritative parenting, could be associated with the positive transmission of Jewish ethnic identity. This type of parenting style was direct as parents expressed clear expectations for participation in Jewish activities both at home and in the community.
Hysterectomy is the second most common surgery in the United States, where it is practiced at far higher levels than in any other country. There is limited understanding however, of why American women choose hysterectomy over other treatments. Using a qualitative interview approach, we examined the attitudes of 18 women who had either a hysterectomy or abdominal myomectomy as a treatment for uterine fibroids. From the thematic analysis it is suggested that the two groups had different factors affecting their choice of surgery, such as information, attitudes toward the reproductive organs, and attitudes toward doctors. It is concluded that greater efforts should be made to improve women's access to information, and that international comparisons might help to improve our understanding of how hysterectomy rates in the United States can be reduced.
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