Human suffering: the need for relationship-based research in pediatric end-of-life care

Title

Human suffering: the need for relationship-based research in pediatric end-of-life care

Creator

Kane JR; Hellsten MB; Coldsmith A

Publisher

Journal Of Pediatric Oncology Nursing

Date

2004

Subject

Interpersonal Relations; Neoplasms/co [complications]; Nursing Research/og [organization & Administration]; Oncology Nursing/og [organization & Administration]; Pediatric Nursing/og [organization & Administration]; Psychology; Stress; Terminal Care; Adaptation; Child; Health Services Needs And Demand; Humans; Psychological; Psychological/et [etiology]; Psychological/nu [nursing]; Psychological/px [psychology]; Quality Of Life; Sick Role; Social Support; Spirituality; Stress; Terminal Care/og [organization & Administration]; Terminal Care/px [psychology]

Description

Children living with and dying from advanced cancer and their families experience significant suffering. The cure of disease and the relief of suffering are dual moral obligations of our professions. To relieve suffering, health care providers must understand the multiple dimensions of the person who suffers and the complex set of relationships within the natural and the clinical social networks. Pediatric oncology research must include appropriately designed studies with sound methodology and measurement strategies to test and refine theories that account for the link between human relationships and the relief of suffering. Studies should assess as many theoretical models as possible, including the social network, perceptions of support, and provider-recipient interactions; their physical, emotional, behavioral, and spiritual concomitants; and their impact on medical decision making and health outcomes. Future directions in pediatric end-of-life care research must also include evaluating social and spiritual interventions developed on the basis of solid hypotheses regarding the positive and negative influences of interpersonal dynamics on the processes that mediate between suffering and well-being. [References: 29]

Rights

Article information provided for research and reference use only. PedPalASCNET does not hold any rights over the resource listed here. All rights are retained by the journal listed under publisher and/or the creator(s).

Citation List Month

Oncology 2017 List

Collection

Citation

Kane JR; Hellsten MB; Coldsmith A, “Human suffering: the need for relationship-based research in pediatric end-of-life care,” Pediatric Palliative Care Library, accessed March 29, 2024, https://pedpalascnetlibrary.omeka.net/items/show/11164.