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Childhood Cancer-Related Fatigue and Day-to-Day Quality of Life.

Tina Antill Keener
Published in: Journal of pediatric oncology nursing : official journal of the Association of Pediatric Oncology Nurses (2018)
Childhood cancer-related fatigue is often viewed as an inevitable symptom of cancer and cancer treatment leading to underassessment by health care providers and self-management by families in the home and hospital environment. Parents' perspectives of the influence of childhood cancer-related fatigue on their child's day-to-day life is needed to understand how parents may or may not prioritize, report, and/or manage the fatigue symptom. This qualitative study used conventional content analysis to describe parents' observations and perspectives on the influence of fatigue in their child's day-to-day quality of life (QOL). Eleven interviews were gathered from parents. The concept childhood cancer-related fatigue and domains of QOL in pediatric oncology patients were used to guide the study, construct interview questions, and conduct conventional content analysis. A synthesis of three categories and seven codes led to three major findings: (a) parents perceive their child's symptoms as co-occurring not as a discrete entity of fatigue, (b) parents accept the child's behavior as a "new normal," and (c) parents recognize fatigue as a warning sign. The study findings reveal differences in how parents observe childhood cancer-related fatigue and how they perceive the symptom influences day-to-day QOL. Findings of this study support current guidelines underscoring the importance of multidimensional fatigue care. Additionally, the findings suggest a standardized multiple symptom instrument may be helpful in assessing symptom experience.
Keyphrases
  • childhood cancer
  • sleep quality
  • healthcare
  • young adults
  • mental health
  • palliative care
  • patient reported
  • end stage renal disease
  • physical activity
  • newly diagnosed
  • peritoneal dialysis
  • drug induced
  • acute care