4.7 Article

Bereaved Families: A Qualitative Study of Therapeutic Intervention

Journal

FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY
Volume 13, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2022.841904

Keywords

grief; bereaved parents; psycho-oncology; group therapy; pediatric oncology; meaning-making; legacy

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This study aims to explore the needs of bereaved parents and the most effective interventions for this group. Through content analysis of parents in grief groups, several themes such as emotional relief, tools, legacy, and unfinished business were identified. The results indicate that the experiences of parents in the grieving process and their needs for social responses are diverse. However, there is a lack of specific research on this problem currently.
Background: A child's death is the most stressful event and the most complex grief that families face. The process of psychological adaptation to the illness and death of a child is difficult due to a variety of emotional reactions. Parental grief had received the attention of researchers only in recent years when it became clear that this reality differs substantially from the general grief process. Objective: This work aims to highlight the needs of bereaved parents; increase the specificity and effectiveness of the therapeutic approach to prevent complications in the process of loss-making; and find the recurrent thematic nuclei in the development of bereavement present in a therapeutic group of parents who have lost their child to an onco-hematological disease. Method: Between 2011 and 2016, five therapeutic groups for the grief elaboration were made. The sample included a total of 50 parents of children who died from cancer between the ages of 0 and 21 years. Content analysis was carried out as a qualitative analysis method. The SAS (R) Text Miner software (SAS Institute Inc, 2004) was used to read, interpret, classify and integrate the data from numerous sources. Results: The development and consecutive interpretation of the 5 clusters have been carried out to analyze the related topics using the node Topic Analysis and requesting the subdivision into five topics. Four topics have been well defined. Clear topics are reducible to categories of emotional relief, tools, legacy, and unfinished business. The topic analysis provides interesting indications about the different interpretive journeys of the bereavement situation and offers ideas regarding the different types of social responses. Conclusions: After reviewing the existing bibliography, we have confirmed the lack of specific literature on the problem of grief in parents whose children have died from cancer. Much research has shown that parents who lose a child to cancer want support, and there are still few studies on the most effective interventions for this group.

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