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. 2020 Apr;59(4):808-817.e2.
doi: 10.1016/j.jpainsymman.2019.11.005. Epub 2019 Nov 13.

Emotional Communication in Advanced Pediatric Cancer Conversations

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Emotional Communication in Advanced Pediatric Cancer Conversations

Bryan A Sisk et al. J Pain Symptom Manage. 2020 Apr.

Abstract

Context: Cancer is a life-changing diagnosis accompanied by significant emotional distress, especially for children with advanced disease. However, the content and processes of discussing emotion in advanced pediatric cancer remain unknown.

Objectives: To describe the initiation, response, and content of emotional communication in advanced pediatric cancer.

Methods: We audiorecorded 35 outpatient consultations between oncologists and families of children whose cancer recently progressed. We coded conversations based on Verona Coding Definitions of Emotional Sequences.

Results: About 91% of conversations contained emotional cues, and 40% contained explicit emotional concerns. Parents and clinicians equally initiated cues (parents: 48%, 183 of 385; clinicians: 49%) and concerns (parents: 51%; clinicians: 49%). Children initiated 3% of cues and no explicit concerns. Emotional content was most commonly related to physical aspects of cancer and/or treatment (28% of cues and/or concerns, present in 80% of conversations) and prognosis (27% of cues and/or concerns, present in 60% of conversations). Clinicians mostly responded to emotional cues and concerns implicitly, without specifically naming the emotion (85%). Back channeling (using minimal prompts or words that encourage further disclosure, e.g., uh-huh) was the most common implicit response that provided space for emotional disclosure (32% of all responses). Information advice was the most common implicit response that reduced space for further emotional disclosure (28%).

Conclusion: Emotional communication in advanced pediatric cancer appears to be a subtle process where parents offer hints and clinicians respond with non-emotion-laden statements. Also, children were seldom engaged in emotional conversations. Clinicians should aim to create an environment that allows families to express emotional distress if and/or when ready.

Keywords: Communication; emotion; physician-patient relationship; psychosocial oncology; supportive care.

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Conflict of interest statement

Disclosures

The authors have no conflicts of interest relevant to this article to disclose.

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