Caregiver perceptions of child heath behaviors and weight during treatment for acute lymphoblastic leukemia

Author:

Tokala Meghan1ORCID,Weber Jacee2,Gilbert Renee1,Dreyer Gillette Meredith L.345ORCID,August Keith J.34ORCID,Befort Christie A.156,Bates Carolyn R.156ORCID

Affiliation:

1. University of Kansas Medical Center Kansas City Kansas USA

2. Kansas City University College of Osteopathic Medicine Kansas City Missouri USA

3. Department of Pediatrics Children's Mercy Kansas City Kansas City Missouri USA

4. University of Missouri Kansas City School of Medicine Kansas City Missouri USA

5. Center for Children's Healthy Lifestyles & Nutrition Kansas City Missouri USA

6. University of Kansas Cancer Center Westwood Kansas USA

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundChanges in health behaviors and weight are common during the early phases of pediatric acute lymphoblastic leukemia treatment, and may negatively impact treatment tolerability. Given that ALL is most prevalent in children, caregivers play an essential role in shaping health behaviors during treatment. This study presents a qualitative analysis of semi‐structured interviews with caregivers of youth in the early phases of ALL treatment.ProcedureCaregivers (N = 17, 95% female) of a child (M age = 6.76 years) diagnosed with ALL and on treatment for less than 1 year (M = 8.7 months since diagnosis) completed a semi‐structured interview about perceptions of their child's nutrition, physical activity, sedentary time, and weight during ALL treatment. Thematic analysis followed Braun and Clark's six‐step framework (2006). Two coders established reliability (alpha = .88) and used a multi‐pass coding system to extract themes.ResultsCaregivers’ concerns around their child's weight during ALL treatment primarily centered around avoiding malnutrition. Weight gain during treatment was less of a concern and often viewed as protective. Caregivers reported encouraging their child to eat palatable, calorie‐dense foods to mitigate risk for weight loss. Caregivers also expressed concern that children were less active and more sedentary due to treatment‐related pain. Caregivers discussed health behaviors during treatment as being child‐directed, rather than parent‐ or provider‐directed.ConclusionFuture interventions may consider strategies to engage in joint parent–child decisions and caregiver education around risks of excessive weight gain during treatment. Interventions should include anticipatory guidance and aim to support parents in developing skills to support their child's health behaviors during treatment.

Publisher

Wiley

Reference44 articles.

1. Surveillance Research Program National Cancer Institute: SEER*Explorer: an interactive website for SEER cancer statistics.National Cancer Institute;2023.

2. Growth patterns during and after treatment in patients with pediatric ALL: A meta-analysis

3. Long-Term and Latent Side Effects of Specific Cancer Types

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