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Change Across Time in Cancer-Related Traumatic Stress Symptoms of Siblings of Children with Cancer: A Preliminary Investigation

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This pilot study examined changes in cancer-related post-traumatic stress symptoms (PTSS) across time for siblings of children with cancer. Siblings ( N  = 32; aged 8–18) completed a measure of anxiety,… Click to show full abstract

This pilot study examined changes in cancer-related post-traumatic stress symptoms (PTSS) across time for siblings of children with cancer. Siblings ( N  = 32; aged 8–18) completed a measure of anxiety, the Child PTSD Symptom Scale (CPSS), and the PTSD section of the Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-IV-TR (SCID) at twelve (SD = .9) and eighteen months (SD = 1.3) post-diagnosis. Moderate-to-severe PTSS was reported by 12 siblings (38%) at T1 and 7 (22%) at T2. Cluster analysis of PTSS data revealed five patterns: Few symptoms, stable across time (31%, n  = 10); Mild symptoms, decreasing across time (16%, n  = 5); Mild, stable symptoms (28%, n  = 9); Moderate/severe symptoms, decreasing across time but remaining moderate (19%, n  = 6); and Moderate/severe, stable symptoms (6%, n  = 2). SCID data and anxiety scores distinguished siblings in the final two clusters from those with more favorable PTSS levels/trajectories. Additional research with larger samples is needed to validate these trajectories and examine factors that distinguish siblings with consistently elevated cancer-related PTSS from those with mild or significantly improving symptoms.

Keywords: cancer related; stress symptoms; cancer; traumatic stress; across time

Journal Title: Journal of Clinical Psychology in Medical Settings
Year Published: 2019

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