2012
DOI: 10.1002/pon.3172
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A culturally adapted family intervention for African American families coping with parental cancer: outcomes of a pilot study

Abstract: Providing culturally adapted family intervention programs to African American families who are coping with parental cancer may result in improved family communication. This pilot study serves as the first step in the development of culturally adapted family intervention programs to help African American families cope with parental cancer.

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Cited by 39 publications
(70 citation statements)
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“…Such programs can include support groups, counseling, psycho-education, and family therapy [9]. Families involved in support programs or interventions reported beneficial outcomes in terms of communication and coping, and family members addressed the interventions favorably [1,52]. Parents also felt they had better insight into their children's experience of parental cancer [1,27,38], parent-child communication improved [27,38], and family conflict was reduced [27,38].…”
Section: Support Servicesmentioning
confidence: 84%
“…Such programs can include support groups, counseling, psycho-education, and family therapy [9]. Families involved in support programs or interventions reported beneficial outcomes in terms of communication and coping, and family members addressed the interventions favorably [1,52]. Parents also felt they had better insight into their children's experience of parental cancer [1,27,38], parent-child communication improved [27,38], and family conflict was reduced [27,38].…”
Section: Support Servicesmentioning
confidence: 84%
“…Conversely, Davey et al . 's () bi‐monthly culturally adapted family intervention found no impact on parent or child depression scores, or relationship quality post‐intervention. However, statistically significant increases in communication as measured by the General Communication Scale (Barnes & Olson ) were reported between pre‐ and post‐intervention scores in both parents (large effect size d = 1.50) and school age children (medium effect size d = 0.72) compared with controls (psycho‐education group).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…Intervention frequency and length varied considerably, from bi‐annual or monthly sessions (Greening ; Heiney & Lesesne ; Davey et al . ), to time‐limited structured interventions, typically between 4 and 8 sessions (Taylor‐Brown et al . ; John et al .…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…After scrutinising the remaining 28 articles, four studies satisfied the selection criteria. Of the 24 texts excluded, 20 were not classified as evaluative studies and four focused solely on parents with early stage cancer (stages 0-III) (Davey, Kissil, Lynch, Harmon, & Hodgson, 2013;Davis Kirsch, Brandt, & Lewis, 2003;John, Becker, & Mattejat, 2013;Lewis et al, 2015). Table 1 provides a summary of the psychosocial intervention program study characteristics.…”
Section: Identification and Selection Criteriamentioning
confidence: 99%