학술논문

Remembering Friends: Exploring the Bereavement Support Needs of Teenagers and Young Adults Experiencing the Death of a Friend in the Cancer Setting.
Document Type
Article
Source
Journal of Adolescent & Young Adult Oncology. Apr2022, Vol. 11 Issue 2, p234-239. 6p.
Subject
*FRIENDSHIP
*GRIEF
*SOCIAL support
*RESEARCH methodology
*QUANTITATIVE research
*CANCER patients
*QUALITATIVE research
*SURVEYS
*DESCRIPTIVE statistics
*QUESTIONNAIRES
*DEATH
*NEED (Psychology)
*THEMATIC analysis
*NEEDS assessment
*BEREAVEMENT
*MEDICAL needs assessment
*ADOLESCENCE
Language
ISSN
2156-5333
Abstract
Introduction: Bereavement is often difficult for adolescents to cope with particularly when the death experienced is a friend due to cancer, while the young person is undergoing their own cancer treatment. There is limited research on this specific type of bereavement. The Teenage & Young Adult (TYA) team at The Christie in Manchester recognized the complicated nature of bereavement in this cohort and identified the need to research this area further. Methods: A mixed method research strategy was used to explore bereavement experiences of young people, gathering qualitative and quantitative data from a TYA bereavement advisory group and an online survey. Inductive thematic analysis was used to establish themes from the qualitative data. Results: Data from the advisory group and survey elicited four main themes: prevalence and emotional impact; maintaining and valuing friendships; communication and conversations; and support and space to grieve. Young people experienced multiple exposures to death, long-term emotional reactions, reflections on mortality, and fears of making new friendships. How a death was communicated was difficult, and bereavement support was lacking. Young people want a formalized bereavement service, provided by specially trained staff, and their own "space" to grieve. Conclusion: Young people in this study highlight the complicated nature of bereavement when their friend dies, while undergoing their own cancer treatment. Bereavement support is essential at the time of a death. TYA services bring young people together for peer support so more emphasis needs to be focused on providing bereavement support to reduce the risk of young people experiencing long-term psychological difficulties and negative outcomes later in life. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]