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Journal article

Psychological factors impacting transition from paediatric to adult care by childhood cancer survivors

Abstract

PurposeChildhood cancer survivors require life-long care focused on the specific late effects that may arise from their cancer and its treatment. In many centers, survivors are required to transition from follow-up care in a paediatric cancer center, to care provided in an adult care setting. The purpose of this study was to identify the psychological factors involved in this transition to adult care long-term follow-up clinics.MethodsQualitative interviews were conducted with ten paediatric survivors still in paediatric care, as well as 28 adult survivors of whom 11 had transitioned successfully to adult care (attended three long-term follow-up (LTFU) appointments consecutively); ten who failed to transition (attended at least one LTFU appointment as an adult, but were inconsistent with subsequent attendance); and seven who had never transitioned (did not attend any LTFU care as an adult). Line-by-line coding was used to establish categories and themes. Constant comparison was used to examine relationships within and across codes and categories.ResultsTwo overall categories and four subthemes were identified: (1) Identification with being a cancer survivor included the subthemes of ‘cancer identity’ and ‘cancer a thing of the past’ and; (2) Emotional components included the subthemes of ‘fear and anxiety’ and ‘gratitude and gaining perspective’. The analysis revealed that the same factor could act as either a motivator or a hindrance to successful transition in different survivors (e.g., fear of recurrence of cancer might be a barrier or a facilitator depending on the survivor’s life experience).ConclusionsPsychological factors are an important consideration when preparing cancer survivors for transition to adult long-term follow-up care. Identifying and addressing the individual psychological needs of childhood cancer survivors may improve the likelihood of their successful transition to adult care.

Authors

Granek L; Nathan PC; Rosenberg-Yunger ZRS; D’Agostino N; Amin L; Barr RD; Greenberg ML; Hodgson D; Boydell K; Klassen AF

Journal

Journal of Cancer Survivorship, Vol. 6, No. 3, pp. 260–269

Publisher

Springer Nature

Publication Date

July 1, 2012

DOI

10.1007/s11764-012-0223-0

ISSN

1932-2259

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