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Moderating influences on parents' fatalistic beliefs about cancer and their association with sun safety behaviors among children of melanoma survivors: Implications for treatment.

Yelena P WuKenneth P TercyakAli P WankierElise K BrunsgaardBridget G ParsonsKatie A DevineTammy K StumpKenneth M BoucherJennifer L Hay
Published in: Journal of health psychology (2023)
The purpose of this study is to examine the association between parents' fatalism about melanoma and their children's sun protection, and the potential moderating role of parent-child communication. In this observational study of N = 69 melanoma-surviving parents of children ages 8-17, parents reported on their own melanoma fatalism, as well as their children's sun safety behaviors and parent-child discussion about sun safety. Parent gender, family history of melanoma, and frequency of parent-child discussions moderated the relationship between parents' fatalism and children's sun safety behaviors. Among mothers and parents with a family history of melanoma, high fatalism was associated with lower child sunscreen use, especially when discussions were less frequent. Melanoma surviving parents' fatalistic beliefs about cancer indirectly influence their children's health behavior and are a risk factor for unsafe sun behavior. Attending to parent gender, family history, and their communications about protective behaviors as co-factors of this risk could inform future intervention targeting.
Keyphrases
  • young adults
  • mental health
  • skin cancer
  • randomized controlled trial
  • public health
  • papillary thyroid
  • squamous cell carcinoma
  • drug delivery
  • risk assessment
  • basal cell carcinoma
  • lymph node metastasis