A Qualitative Study of the Experiences of Parents With an Adult Child Who Has a Severe Disease: Existential Questions Will Be Raised

被引:7
|
作者
Benkel, Inger [1 ]
Molander, Ulla [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Gothenburg, Gothenburg, Sweden
关键词
adult children; anxiety; existential; parents; qualitative study; BEREAVEMENT;
D O I
10.1177/0046958017727107
中图分类号
R19 [保健组织与事业(卫生事业管理)];
学科分类号
摘要
A prominent existential concept is that elderly parents should naturally become severely ill or die before a younger person does. If the reverse should happen, it may influence the parent's existential view of life. The aim of this study was to investigate the existential issues during illness time. This was a qualitative study with in-depth interviews and was conducted in a University Hospital in western Sweden. Eleven parents agreed to participate in individual interviews at baseline and 1 year later. The total number of interviews completed was 19. The study identified 5 areas according to an existential perspective: life took the wrong path, the age of the child, difficult to see the child as sick, worrying about the child, and the relationship with the adult child. Existential questions are often present in those circumstances and can be raised in conversations with parents. Existential questions began to arise for the parent when the child was diagnosed with the severe illness. The situation of having a severely ill child caused both fear and anxiety that the worst-case scenario they could imagine, that the child will die, might happen. Further research is required on this rarely investigated subject of having an adult child with a severe disease.
引用
收藏
页数:6
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Elderly Parents' Experiences of Living With an Adult Child With Schizophrenia: A Qualitative Study
    Sharifi, Mehdi
    Younesi, Seyyed Jalal
    Foroughan, Mahshid
    Safi, Mohammad Hadi
    Khanjani, Mohammad Saeed
    SALMAND-IRANIAN JOURNAL OF AGEING, 2024, 19 (01): : 21 - 21
  • [2] Tightrope walkers suffering in silence: A qualitative study into the experiences of older parents who have an adult child with cancer
    Van Humbeeck, Liesbeth
    Dillen, Let
    Piers, Ruth
    Deveugele, Myriam
    Grypdonck, Mieke
    Verhaeghe, Sofie
    Van Den Noortgate, Nele
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF NURSING STUDIES, 2015, 52 (09) : 1445 - 1453
  • [3] Peer support experiences among Chinese parents who lost their only child: A qualitative study
    Zhou, Ningning
    Wu, Ruiyao
    Xu, Xin
    Wang, Jianping
    DEATH STUDIES, 2023, 47 (06) : 738 - 750
  • [4] Parents' experiences of parenting a preadolescent child with OCD: A qualitative study
    Chessell, Chloe
    Harvey, Kate
    Halldorsson, Brynjar
    Farrington, Alice
    Creswell, Cathy
    EMOTIONAL AND BEHAVIOURAL DIFFICULTIES, 2023, 28 (01) : 68 - 85
  • [5] Adult mental healthcare professionals' experiences of family centred conversations with patients who are parents: a qualitative study
    Dalton, Louise J.
    de Cassan, Simone
    Ilyas, Athif
    Dunn, Abby
    Rapa, Elizabeth
    FRONTIERS IN PSYCHIATRY, 2024, 15
  • [6] The exploration of parents perceptions and experiences of caring for a child who has undergone cataract extraction
    Clarke, JK
    TRANSACTIONS OF THE IX INTERNATIONAL ORTHOPTIC CONGRESS, 1999, : 336 - 336
  • [7] Older poor parents who lost an adult child to aids in Togo, West Africa: A qualitative study
    Moore, Ami R.
    OMEGA-JOURNAL OF DEATH AND DYING, 2007, 56 (03) : 289 - 304
  • [8] "There is a strangeness in this disease": A qualitative study of parents' experiences caring for a child diagnosed with COVID-19
    Louie-Poon, Samantha
    Reid, Kathy
    Appiah, Priscilla O.
    Hartling, Lisa
    Scott, Shannon D.
    PLOS ONE, 2024, 19 (04):
  • [9] Qualitative study on parents' perspectives of the familial impact of living with a child with autism spectrum disorder who experiences insomnia
    Kirkpatrick, Bernadette
    Gilroy, Shawn P.
    Leader, Geraldine
    SLEEP MEDICINE, 2019, 62 : 59 - 68
  • [10] A child’s admission to hospital: a qualitative study examining the experiences of parents
    A. Diaz-Caneja
    J. Gledhill
    T. Weaver
    S. Nadel
    E. Garralda
    Intensive Care Medicine, 2005, 31 : 1248 - 1254