Abstract

Abstract BACKGROUND The physical, emotional, social, developmental, and economic risk experienced by survivors of childhood brain tumors and their families is well documented, as is the acceleration of those risks as survivors transition into young adulthood. Further, the impact of the lack of services in the community is compounded by insufficient investigation of interventions to support survivor functioning and their caregiver’s management of their medical and psychosocial needs.The purpose of this study was to describe maternal caregivers’ perspectives about key components of potential interventions to support maternal caregivers of young adult survivors of childhood brain tumors. METHODS Data were obtained from 21 at-risk maternal caregivers (based on the Family Management Style Measure) of young adult survivors aged 18-29 years old who were not partnered, were presently living at home, and who participated in a pilot randomized trial Training in Problem Solving (TIPS) for Caregiver of Young Adult Survivors of Childhood Brain Tumors. Caregivers were interviewed using a semi-structured qualitative interview guide constructed using the Consolidated Framework for Implementation Science. Codes, categories, then themes were identified by means of directed content analysis. RESULTS All caregivers agreed these services were absent and the most effective timing would be at the transition to survivorship with ongoing follow-up. Key components of potential interventions identified by maternal caregivers were skill-building, motivational interviewing to increase readiness to change long-standing patterns of family management, use of validation of their efforts as parents and caregivers to build confidence in trying new approaches and shifting their perspectives on ongoing caregiving for a childhood brain tumor survivor to find hope in even small changes. CONCLUSIONS Caregivers endorsed the importance of targeted psychosocial support throughout survivorship for caregivers within the context of their family, facilitating their roles as both parents and caregivers to young adult childhood brain tumor survivors.

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