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Sources of social support: adolescents with cancer.
Oncol Nurs Forum. 2002 Oct; 29(9):1317-24.ON

Abstract

PURPOSE/OBJECTIVES

To evaluate how a cancer diagnosis affects adolescents' perceived sources of social support, amount of support needed, and level of satisfaction with support compared to an age-matched, healthy, adolescent group.

DESIGN

Cross-sectional, comparative, nonrandom survey.

SETTING

Summer camp for adolescents with cancer and a rural high school in the southeastern United States.

SAMPLE

Adolescents with a diagnosis of cancer (n = 64) and age-matched, healthy adolescents (n = 115).

METHODS

Subjects completed the Social Support Questionnaire, Perceived Social Support From Family Scale, Perceived Social Support From Friends Scale, and demographic information forms.

MAIN RESEARCH VARIABLES

Sources of social support, amount of support perceived, and level of satisfaction with support.

FINDINGS

Adolescents with cancer perceived social support coming from both friends and family and reported high levels of support satisfaction from each source. Compared to healthy adolescents, those with cancer reported similar support sources and satisfaction levels; however, adolescents with cancer perceived parental relationships as more supportive.

CONCLUSIONS

Similarities between healthy adolescents and those with cancer regarding social support were more prevalent than differences. The social benefits of camp settings for chronically ill children should be explored further.

IMPLICATIONS FOR NURSING

Nurses and other healthcare professionals should allow adolescents in the healthcare setting every opportunity to maintain their social networks of friends and family by encouraging visitation, providing social opportunities in the hospital, and emphasizing the importance of attending school when medically able.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Child Life Department, St. Jude Children's Research Hospital, Memphis, TN, USA. heather.haluska@stjude.orgNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Comparative Study
Journal Article

Language

eng

PubMed ID

12370701

Citation

Haluska, Heather B., et al. "Sources of Social Support: Adolescents With Cancer." Oncology Nursing Forum, vol. 29, no. 9, 2002, pp. 1317-24.
Haluska HB, Jessee PO, Nagy MC. Sources of social support: adolescents with cancer. Oncol Nurs Forum. 2002;29(9):1317-24.
Haluska, H. B., Jessee, P. O., & Nagy, M. C. (2002). Sources of social support: adolescents with cancer. Oncology Nursing Forum, 29(9), 1317-24.
Haluska HB, Jessee PO, Nagy MC. Sources of Social Support: Adolescents With Cancer. Oncol Nurs Forum. 2002;29(9):1317-24. PubMed PMID: 12370701.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Sources of social support: adolescents with cancer. AU - Haluska,Heather B, AU - Jessee,Peggy O, AU - Nagy,M Christine, PY - 2002/10/9/pubmed PY - 2002/10/31/medline PY - 2002/10/9/entrez SP - 1317 EP - 24 JF - Oncology nursing forum JO - Oncol Nurs Forum VL - 29 IS - 9 N2 - PURPOSE/OBJECTIVES: To evaluate how a cancer diagnosis affects adolescents' perceived sources of social support, amount of support needed, and level of satisfaction with support compared to an age-matched, healthy, adolescent group. DESIGN: Cross-sectional, comparative, nonrandom survey. SETTING: Summer camp for adolescents with cancer and a rural high school in the southeastern United States. SAMPLE: Adolescents with a diagnosis of cancer (n = 64) and age-matched, healthy adolescents (n = 115). METHODS: Subjects completed the Social Support Questionnaire, Perceived Social Support From Family Scale, Perceived Social Support From Friends Scale, and demographic information forms. MAIN RESEARCH VARIABLES: Sources of social support, amount of support perceived, and level of satisfaction with support. FINDINGS: Adolescents with cancer perceived social support coming from both friends and family and reported high levels of support satisfaction from each source. Compared to healthy adolescents, those with cancer reported similar support sources and satisfaction levels; however, adolescents with cancer perceived parental relationships as more supportive. CONCLUSIONS: Similarities between healthy adolescents and those with cancer regarding social support were more prevalent than differences. The social benefits of camp settings for chronically ill children should be explored further. IMPLICATIONS FOR NURSING: Nurses and other healthcare professionals should allow adolescents in the healthcare setting every opportunity to maintain their social networks of friends and family by encouraging visitation, providing social opportunities in the hospital, and emphasizing the importance of attending school when medically able. SN - 1538-0688 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/12370701/Sources_of_social_support:_adolescents_with_cancer_ DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -