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Clinical Trial Summary

Background: - Serious illnesses like cancer or Neurofibromatosis Type 1 (NF1), can cause high levels of stress in a family. When a child is diagnosed with cancer or NF1, parents face numerous stressors, each of which can strain relationships. Many parents struggle to effectively cope with the changes in parenting roles that often accompany treatment of childhood cancer or NF1. How parents cope with this stress can influence whether the relationship is strengthened or weakened. Stress levels can also affect the care of the child who has cancer or NF1. Researchers want to better understand the critical time points and events during the child s treatment when the relationship becomes most stressed and/or strengthened. Objectives: - To study how stress affects the relationship between parents who have a child with cancer or Neurofibromatosis Type 1 (NF1). Eligibility: - Parents of a child (between 1 and 24 years of age) who has been diagnosed with cancer or NF1. - Participants must have been in a partnership at the time the child was diagnosed with cancer or NF1. At least one of the parents must be a biological or legal parent of the child. Design: - Participants will fill out a questionnaire either online or by paper and pencil. It will take about 20 minutes to complete. The questions ask about the experience of dealing with a child s cancer OR NF1 diagnosis and how it affects participants relationship with their spouse/partner. - Some participants will also have an in-depth interview. It will last about an hour. It will ask further questions about the cancer OR NF1 diagnosis and treatment and its effect on the relationship. - Treatment will not be provided as part of this study.


Clinical Trial Description

Background: - Parents face numerous stressors when their child is diagnosed with cancer or NF1, each of which can strain a marriage/partnership. - Marital/partner relationship dynamics are often not assessed or addressed when providing health care for children with cancer or NF1. Many parents struggle to effectively cope with the changes in parenting roles that frequently accompany treatment of childhood cancer or NF1. - How parents cope with these stressors can strengthen or weaken the relationship, and can impact the entire family, including the care to the child undergoing cancer or NF1 treatments. - Limited studies have examined relationship stress or satisfaction during a child s illness trajectory for cancer or NF1 or the critical time points and events during the child s illness trajectory when the relationship becomes most stressed and/or strengthened. Objectives: - To explore whether the stress associated with having a child with cancer or NF1 is perceived to impact the communication between partners. - To explore whether positive dyadic coping (joint decision making, joint problem solving, sharing responsibilities) is perceived to have strengthened the marital relationship/partnership following the child s diagnosis with cancer or NF1. - To describe the time points and events during the child s illness trajectory when the parents relationship becomes most stressed and/or strengthened. - To compare the perceptions of various subgroups in the sample, (e.g. parents who score either high or low on a marital stress scale, mothers versus fathers) statistically or qualitatively as the distribution of the characteristics of the sample allow. Eligibility: - Participants must have been in a partnership at the time the child was diagnosed with cancer or NF1. At least one of the participating parents must be a biological or legal parent of the child. If a divorce/separation occurred with a previous partner during/after the child s diagnosis, the other partner will be invited to participate. - The participant s child must be between 1-24 years of age. - There are 3 groups of participants being recruited: 1) those who have a child who has been diagnosed with cancer at least 3 months prior to enrolling on this study and are currently undergoing cancer treatment, 2) those who have completed treatment at age 21 or younger (without evidence of disease) within the previous 3 years, and 3) those who have a child who has been diagnosed with NF1 at least 3 months prior to enrolling on this study. - Participants must be fluent in the English language - The participant s child must have been diagnosed with cancer or NF1 at least 3 months prior to enrollment on this study. - Participants must verbalize willingness to discuss the impact of their child s cancer or NF1 diagnosis on their relationship. Design: - Cross-sectional, multi-center, exploratory study utilizing a convenience sample to explore the parents perception of how the child s cancer or NF1 diagnosis, treatment, decision making and other aspects of care are addressed and impact the martial relationship/partnership. - Subjects will complete a self-administered measure that addresses potential stresses experienced in the partnership since the child s diagnosis and how each are either resolved or create a divide in the relationship. - Subjects who experience a high or low degree of relationship stress on a standardized marital stress form (a score greater than one standard deviation from the norm) will be invited to participate in a qualitative interview, that further explores which components of parenting a child with cancer is most challenging on the relationship. - Up to 360 participants will be enrolled onto this study (up to 180 couples). Subjects may be offered a gift card ($20 Target gift card at NIH) upon completion of the questionnaire for their time and inconvenience, where available. Due to limitations with funding, participants enrolled after July 2016 will not receive a gift card. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT01702922
Study type Observational
Source National Institutes of Health Clinical Center (CC)
Contact
Status Completed
Phase
Start date September 13, 2012

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