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Parental cancer and...
Parental cancer and children’s well-being : understanding the potential role of psychological stress
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- Ruoqing, Chen, 1985- (author)
- Institutionen för Medicinsk Epidemiologi och Biostatistik, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden
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- Fang, Fang, docent (thesis advisor)
- Department of Medical Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Karolinska Institutet
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- Valdimarsdóttir, Unnur, professor (thesis advisor)
- Faculty of Medicine Centre of Public Health Sciences, University of Iceland
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- Fall, Katja, docent, 1971- (thesis advisor)
- Örebro universitet, Institutionen för medicinska vetenskaper
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- Czene, Kamila, professor (thesis advisor)
- Department of Medical Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Karolinska Institutet
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- Bergelt, Corinna, professor (opponent)
- Department of Medical Psychology, University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf
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- ISBN 9789176766521
- Stockholm : Karolinska Institutet, 2017
- English 53 s.
- Related links:
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Abstract
Subject headings
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- Early life stress has a major influence on one’s health through the life course. During childhood, early experience may not only affect the normal brain development, but also influence the susceptibility to mental and physical disorders. A cancer diagnosis in a parent may cause substantial distress in the children, who may have to confront and adapt to short- and long-term changes in their lives and subsequently experience a higher risk of physical and psychosocial problems. Therefore, the first aim of this thesis was to examine whether parental cancer is associated with physical and mental health problems in the affected children using data from the Swedish national registers. Further, to explore the potential mechanism determining the impact of stress on children’ health, we focused on the brain development in childhood and investigated the association between stress biomarkers and brain morphology, using data from a Dutch population-based cohort.In Study I, we assessed the association between parental cancer and risk of injury in a large representative sample of Swedish children. We found that parental cancer was associated with a higher risk of hospital contacts for injury, particularly during the first year after the cancer diagnosis and when the parent experienced a psychiatric illness after the cancer diagnosis. The risk increment reduced during the second and third years and became null afterwards.Given the observed higher risk of adverse physical health in terms of injury, we further investigated the influence of parental cancer on adverse mental health in terms of psychiatric disorders among children. In Study II, we constructed a matched cohort, and separately examined the associations between parental cancer diagnosed during pregnancy or after birth and clinical diagnoses of psychiatric disorders or use of prescribed psychiatric medications. Paternal but not maternal cancer during pregnancy appeared to be associated with a higher risk of psychiatric disorders, primary among girls. Parental cancer after birth conferred a higher risk of clinical diagnoses of psychiatric disorders, particularly stress reaction and adjustment disorders. The affected children also experienced a higher risk of use of prescribed psychiatric medications, particularly anxiolytics. The latter associations were most pronounced for parental cancer with poor expected survival and for parental death after cancer diagnosis.In Study III, we focused on other domains of mental and physical health affected by parental cancer. We examined the associations of parental cancer with intellectual performance, stress resilience, and physical fitness among boys that underwent the compulsory military conscription examination during early adulthood. We observed positive associations of parental cancer with low stress resilience and low physical fitness, with stronger associations noted for parental cancer with poor expected survival and for a loss of parent through death after cancer diagnosis. No overall association was observed between parental cancer and intellectual performance, but the parental cancer with poor expected survival or resulting in a death of the parent was associated with a higher risk of low intellectual performance.
Subject headings
- MEDICIN OCH HÄLSOVETENSKAP -- Klinisk medicin -- Psykiatri (hsv//swe)
- MEDICAL AND HEALTH SCIENCES -- Clinical Medicine -- Psychiatry (hsv//eng)
Publication and Content Type
- vet (subject category)
- dok (subject category)
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- By the author/editor
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Ruoqing, Chen, 1 ...
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Fang, Fang, doce ...
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Valdimarsdóttir, ...
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Fall, Katja, doc ...
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Czene, Kamila, p ...
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Bergelt, Corinna ...
- About the subject
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- MEDICAL AND HEALTH SCIENCES
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MEDICAL AND HEAL ...
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and Clinical Medicin ...
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and Psychiatry
- By the university
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Örebro University
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Karolinska Institutet