儿童癌症长期幸存者的父母与瑞士普通人群父母的创伤后应激反应比较。

Julia Baenziger, Katharina Roser, Luzius Mader, Erika Harju, Marc Ansari, Nicolas Waespe, Katrin Scheinemann, Gisela Michel
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摘要

背景:我们描述了儿童癌症长期幸存者的父母(CCS-父母)的创伤后应激症状(PTSS)和创伤后应激障碍(PTSD),并将其与瑞士普通人群(SGP)中类似年龄儿童的父母(对比父母)进行了比较。我们比较了所报告的压力事件的类型、创伤后应激障碍和创伤后应激障碍的发病率,以及与创伤后应激障碍相关的社会心理和癌症相关特征。我们还进一步描述了 SGP 的相关标准数据:我们在全国范围内对长期CCS父母(诊断时年龄≤16岁,研究时年龄≥20岁,诊断后年龄>5岁的幸存者)和SGP进行了横断面问卷调查。我们使用事件影响量表(Impact of Event Scale-Revised)测量了创伤后应激障碍患者所经历的最大应激事件,并计算了创伤后应激障碍的可能病例:参与者包括 663 名 CCS 父母(39.4% 为父亲)和 1035 名 SGP 个人(40.0% 为男性),其中我们确定了 391 名对比父母(41.2% 为父亲)。疾病是最常见的压力事件(CCS 父母:49.5%;对比父母:27.6%;SGP:25.3%)。创伤后应激障碍和创伤后应激障碍的发生率(CCS-家长:4.8%,对比家长:6.7%,SGP:5.6%)没有显著差异。在所有样本中,教育程度较低与较高的入侵、回避和过度焦虑相关(所有 P 均小于 0.003)。患有慢性疾病的儿童的父母报告了较高的内隐程度(所有 P 均小于 .004)。我们没有发现与癌症相关特征的关联:结论:在 CCS 父母中,没有发现 PTSS 或 PTSD 的风险增加。教育程度较低的人和有慢性病患儿的人可能会从额外的支持中获益,以帮助管理和解决长期的压力症状。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

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Post-traumatic stress in parents of long-term childhood cancer survivors compared to parents of the Swiss general population.

Background: We describe post-traumatic stress symptoms (PTSS) and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) in parents of long-term childhood cancer survivors (CCS-parents) and compare them to parents of similar-aged children (comparison-parents) of the Swiss general population (SGP). We compare type of reported stressful event, prevalence of PTSS and PTSD, and psychosocial and cancer-related characteristics associated with PTSS. We further describe the respective normative data for the SGP.

Methods: We conducted a nationwide cross-sectional questionnaire survey in a population-based sample of long-term CCS-parents (survivors aged ≤16 years at diagnosis, ≥20 years at study, >5 years post-diagnosis) and in the SGP. Using the Impact of Event Scale-Revised, we measured PTSS regarding the most stressful event experienced, and computed probable cases of PTSD.

Results: Participants included 663 CCS-parents (39.4% fathers) and 1035 individuals of the SGP (40.0% male), of which we identified 391 comparison-parents (41.2% fathers). Illness was most often indicated as stressful event (CCS-parents: 49.5%, comparison-parents: 27.6%, SGP: 25.3%). Prevalence of PTSS and PTSD (CCS-parents: 4.8%, comparison-parents: 6.7%, SGP: 5.6%) did not significantly differ. Lower education was associated with higher intrusion, avoidance, and hyperarousal in all samples (all P ≤ .003). Parents of children with a chronic illness reported higher intrusion (all P ≤ .004). We found no associations with cancer-related characteristics.

Conclusions: No increased risk for PTSS or PTSD was found among CCS-parents. Individuals with lower education and those with a chronically ill child might benefit from additional support to help manage and resolve the stress symptoms in the long term.

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