The Asian Age

Why teens need to understand care plans for dying parents

- Lisa Rapaport

When children lose a parent during adolescenc­e, their mental health as young adults may depend on how comfortabl­e they were with the treatment and support provided at the end of their parents’ lives, a recent study suggests.

To understand the lasting psychologi­cal impact of the death of a parent during adolescenc­e, researcher­s surveyed young adults who had lost a parent to cancer six to nine years earlier, when they were 13 to 16 years old.

Overall, 105 of the 593 young adults (18%) said they had little or no trust in the care provided during the final week of the parent’s life.

Compared to the participan­ts who were satisfied with the final week of care, those who were unhappy were more than twice as likely to suffer from mental health issues like depression, anxiety and eating disorders, researcher­s report in the Journal of Clinical Oncology, online August 8.

“We already knew that children who have lost a parent are at risk for long-term psychologi­cal challenges including depression, risk of suicide, and risk of selfinjury,” said Dr Jennifer Mack, a researcher at Harvard Medical School and DanaFarber/Boston Children’s Cancer and Blood Disorders Centre.

“However, a link to trust in the medical providers of the parent was not previously understood,” Mack, who wasn’t involved in the study, said by email. “This is important because it offers a potential path forward to greater resilience and healing after a parent’s death for young people who experience this type of profound loss.”

The current study focuses not on how teens felt when their parent was dying, or immediatel­y afterwards, noted lead study author Kim Beernaert of the End-ofLife Research Group at Vrije University Brussels and Ghent University.

Instead, it looks at how they feel after several years have passed, Beernaert said by email.

Young people who had little or no trust in the care parents received at the end of life were at least twice as likely to report still feeling bitter toward health providers for failing to make the correct initial diagnosis, stopping or never starting treatment, or not doing everything possible for the parent, the study found.

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