Impacts of COVID-19 on caregivers of childhood cancer survivors.
Courtney E WimberlyLisa TowryCaroline CaudillEmily E JohnstonKyle M WalshPublished in: Pediatric blood & cancer (2021)
Caregivers from 321 unique families completed the survey, including 175 with children under active surveillance/follow-up care and 146 with children no longer receiving oncology care. Overall, caregivers expressed exceptional resiliency, highlighting commonalities between caring for a child with cancer and adopting COVID-19 prophylactic measures. However, respondents reported delayed/canceled appointments (50%) and delayed/canceled imaging (19%). Eleven percent of caregivers reported struggling to pay for basic needs, which was associated with greater disruption to daily life, greater feelings of anxiety, poorer sleep, and less access to social support (p < .05). Caregivers who were self-isolating reported greater feelings of anxiety and poorer sleep (p < .05). Respondents who expressed confidence in the government response to COVID-19 reported less disruption to their daily life, decreased feelings of depression and anxiety, better sleep, and greater hopefulness (p < .001) CONCLUSIONS: Caregivers are experiencing changes to medical care, financial disruptions, and emotional distress due to COVID-19. To better serve caregivers and medically at-risk children, clinicians must evaluate financial toxicity and feelings of isolation in families affected by childhood cancer, and work to provide reliable information on how COVID-19 may differentially impact their children.
Keyphrases
- palliative care
- childhood cancer
- coronavirus disease
- young adults
- sars cov
- social support
- sleep quality
- physical activity
- depressive symptoms
- healthcare
- respiratory syndrome coronavirus
- mental health
- quality improvement
- squamous cell carcinoma
- oxidative stress
- papillary thyroid
- mass spectrometry
- lymph node metastasis
- chronic pain