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Volume 22, Issue 3, Pages 182-189 (May 2008)


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Fathers of Children with Cancer: Involvement, Coping, and Adjustment

Laura M. Bennett Murphy, PhDCorresponding Author Information, Stacy Flowers, MA, Kelly A. McNamara, MA, Tammi Young-Saleme, PhD

published online 06 March 2008.

Abstract 

Introduction

This study examined the role of fathers caring for children with cancer. Psychological adjustment, coping, and work patterns of mothers and fathers were described.

Method

Twenty fathers of children with cancer were compared with 20 mothers of children with cancer and 20 control fathers of healthy children. Questionnaire data were collected regarding coping, parental adjustment, child adjustment, and family involvement.

Results

Fathers did not differ from mothers or control fathers in terms of psychological adjustment or coping. However, fathers of children with cancer spent more hours at work and more hours caring for children than did control fathers. Paternal adjustment was significantly related to child adjustment only when the child had cancer. Coping was related to work outside the home for fathers and adjustment for mothers.

Discussion

Models of family adaptation may be different for fathers and mothers. Treatment teams must attend to the unique needs of fathers.

Corresponding Author InformationCorrespondence: Laura M. Bennett-Murphy, PhD, Department of Psychology, Westminster College, 1840 South 1300 East, Salt Lake City, UT 84105.

PII: S0891-5245(07)00217-9

doi:10.1016/j.pedhc.2007.06.003


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