Parental Death: A Preventive Intervention

Abstract
The loss of a parent during childhood is a profound psychological trauma which threatens a child’s normal social and emotional development [1]. At Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center (MSKCC), a comprehensive cancer treatment and research center, parents turned to our staff for help in dealing with their own and their children’s reactions to the presence of cancer in one of the parents. Our clinical experiences with these parents led us to hypothesize that the terminal stage and death of a parent contain the most stressful and traumatic experiences during the course of the disease [2]. In this presentation we will limit ourselves to a description of an ongoing study that specifically addresses the question: Can psychoeducational parent guidance intervention prevent or lessen the deleterious effects on children of the terminal stage and death of a parent from cancer?

This publication has 0 references indexed in Scilit: