Abstract

e24005 Background: Cancer is the leading disease-related cause of death for children in the United States, but there is limited data on the needs of caregivers who have lost a child to cancer, and few evidence-based bereavement interventions exist. Parents whose children die from cancer have increased rates of depression, anxiety, and health problems. Prior studies have shown that bereaved parents desire continued contact with their child’s medical team and to connect with parents who have had similar losses. Methods: This is a cross sectional survey of primary caregivers of pediatric patients who died from cancer and were cared for at a moderate size pediatric oncology program (50 new diagnoses per year) from 2010 to 2020. Participation was solicited by mail in English and Spanish. Research packets contained five surveys: Demographic Survey, The Needs Assessment for Family Caregivers Bereaved to Cancer, Quality of Life Survey (SF-36), Brief Grief Assessment, and Social Support Questionnaire (SSQ-6). Interested subjects also participated in a semi-structured, in-depth qualitative interview. Results: One hundred six potentially eligible families were identified. 27 families consented, 10 were without a known address, and 2 opted out. Twenty research packets and 9 interviews were completed, representing 19% of the population of interest and 23% of the invited population. The sample was diverse in gender, age, income, and education level, but not race. The greatest unmet needs were finding meaning in the death, personal wellness, and social activities. Caregivers reported good physical functioning but poor emotional well-being and fatigue. Complicated grief was most profound in the interference (grief interfering with life) and intrusion (images and thoughts of the child) domains. Quantity of social support correlated with satisfaction with social support (P = 0.02). Bereaved parents with greater unmet needs were found to have poorer quality of life in the following domains: energy/fatigue (P = 0.005), role limitations due to emotional problems (P = 0.01), pain (P = 0.01), and emotional well-being (P = 0.02). Greater unmet needs did not correlate to more complicated grief (P = 0.30) or satisfaction with social support (P = 0.08). Interview themes elicited were inadequate current bereavement services, necessary support for siblings, desired contact with the medical team, and connections to other bereaved caregivers. Conclusions: Findings support the need for implementation of more intensive evidence-based bereavement programs for families of children who died from cancer. The data suggests that interventions targeting emotional well-being and increased social supports, in the form of connections to the medical team and other bereaved families, will be the most efficacious in mitigating poor bereavement-related outcomes.

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