Survivors of child and adolescent cancer experiences of bullying at school or work: self-report and parent proxy report

Joanna E Fardell, Clarissa E Schilstra, Jemima Hikila, Daisy E. Collins, L. Kelada, S. Lah, Richard J. Cohn, Claire E. Wakefield, Sarah J. Ellis
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Abstract

Childhood cancer survivors can face social difficulties on return to school after treatment. One such difficulty with significant consequences is bullying. This study aimed to describe the experiences of bullying among survivors of childhood cancer. We recruited survivors aged 8–25 years, 1–10 years posttreatment and their parents. Participants completed a survey, and we conducted semistructured interviews about their experiences with bullying and other social experiences on return to school or work. A total of 73 survivors (52 children/adolescents and 21 young adults) and 61 parents (including 47 survivor-parent dyads) participated in a questionnaire. Nine survivors and 16 parents completed interviews. A large proportion of survivors experienced some form of bullying (44%) on survey, and one survivor and 7 parents reported experiencing some form of bullying during interview. There was low agreement between survivor self-reports and parent reports of bullying, with survivors more commonly reporting experiencing bullying. Bullying commonly included verbal teasing or social exclusion. Survivors and parents that reported bullying resulted from peer misunderstanding regarding survivors' physical or psychological differences or from survivors' poor social competence. Having proactive parents and close friendships were protective. Programs that increased peer understanding, facilitated friendships and directly targeted bullying reduced or prevented bullying of survivors. A significant proportion of young survivors experienced bullying on return to school which was associated with poor social and emotional functioning. A coordinated approach between young survivors, their families, treating team and school, combined with opportunities for socialization and peer education, is needed to reduce bullying.
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儿童和青少年癌症幸存者在学校或工作场所遭受欺凌的经历:自我报告和家长代理报告
儿童癌症幸存者在治疗后重返校园时可能会面临社交困难。其中一个后果严重的困难就是欺凌。本研究旨在描述儿童癌症幸存者遭受欺凌的经历。 我们招募了年龄在 8-25 岁、治疗后 1-10 年的幸存者及其父母。参与者填写了一份调查问卷,我们对他们进行了半结构化访谈,了解他们在重返校园或工作岗位后遭受欺凌的经历及其他社会经历。 共有 73 名幸存者(52 名儿童/青少年和 21 名年轻人)和 61 名家长(包括 47 名幸存者-家长二人组)参与了问卷调查。9 名幸存者和 16 名家长完成了访谈。很大一部分幸存者(44%)在调查中遭受过某种形式的欺凌,1 名幸存者和 7 名家长表示在访谈中遭受过某种形式的欺凌。幸存者的自我报告与家长的欺凌报告之间的一致性较低,幸存者更常报告自己遭受过欺凌。欺凌行为通常包括口头戏弄或社会排斥。幸存者和家长报告的欺凌行为是由于同伴误解了幸存者的生理或心理差异,或者幸存者的社交能力较差。拥有积极主动的父母和亲密的朋友关系可以起到保护作用。增加同伴理解、促进友谊和直接针对欺凌行为的计划可以减少或防止幸存者遭受欺凌。 相当大比例的幸存青少年在重返校园后遭受欺凌,这与社交和情感功能低下有关。为了减少欺凌行为,年轻幸存者、其家人、治疗团队和学校之间需要采取协调的方法,并提供社交和同伴教育的机会。
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