Emotional and behavioral problems of pediatric cancer survivors and their siblings: Concordance of child self‐report and parent proxy‐report

Author:

Paul Verena1,Inhestern Laura1ORCID,Winzig Jana1,Nasse Mona L.1,Krauth Konstantin A.2,Rutkowski Stefan3,Escherich Gabriele3,Bergelt Corinna4

Affiliation:

1. Department of Medical Psychology University Medical Center Hamburg‐Eppendorf Hamburg Germany

2. Department of Pediatrics, Pediatric Hematology and Oncology Klinik Bad Oexen Bad Oeynhausen Germany

3. Department of Pediatric Hematology and Oncology University Medical Center Hamburg‐Eppendorf Hamburg Germany

4. Department of Medical Psychology University Medicine Greifswald Greifswald Germany

Abstract

AbstractObjectiveChildhood cancer confronts families with major challenges. The study aimed at developing an empirical and multi‐perspective understanding of emotional and behavioral problems of cancer survivors diagnosed with leukemia and brain tumors and their siblings. Further, the concordance between child self‐report and parent proxy‐report was examined.Methods140 children (72 survivors, 68 siblings) and 309 parents were included in the analysis (respond rate: 34%). Patients, diagnosed with leukemia or brain tumors, and their families were surveyed on average 7.2 months after the end of intensive therapy. Outcomes were assessed using the German SDQ. Results were compared with normative samples. Data were analyzed descriptively, and group differences between survivors, siblings, and a norm sample were determined using one‐factor ANOVA followed by pairwise comparisons. The concordance between the parents and children was determined by calculating Cohen's kappa coefficient.ResultsNo differences in the self‐report of survivors and their siblings were identified. Both groups reported significantly more emotional problems and more prosocial behavior than the normative sample. Although the interrater reliability between parents and children was mostly significant, low concordances were found for emotional problems, prosocial behavior (survivor/parents), and peer relationship problems (siblings/parents).ConclusionThe findings point out the importance of psychosocial services in regular aftercare. These should not only focus on survivors, but additionally address the siblings' needs. The low concordance between the parents' and the children's perspectives on emotional problems, prosocial behavior, and peer relationship problems suggests the inclusion of both perspectives to allow needs‐based support.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health,Oncology,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology

Reference32 articles.

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