The Damocles Syndrome: Psychosocial Consequences of Surviving Childhood Cancer |
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Page 136
... anger as potentially harmful to the child . Anger is considered to be a normal reaction to the death of a loved person ( Bowlby , 1961 ) ; it also occurs when a loved person becomes ill . If this anger is personally unacceptable it may ...
... anger as potentially harmful to the child . Anger is considered to be a normal reaction to the death of a loved person ( Bowlby , 1961 ) ; it also occurs when a loved person becomes ill . If this anger is personally unacceptable it may ...
Page 141
... anger toward the child currently . Fathers seemed to have greater difficulty in acknowledging anger toward the surviving child . It is not that these fathers generally acknowledge less anger toward their children , but rather less anger ...
... anger toward the child currently . Fathers seemed to have greater difficulty in acknowledging anger toward the surviving child . It is not that these fathers generally acknowledge less anger toward their children , but rather less anger ...
Page 142
... anger toward the adolescent . Several possible explanations were considered , the most likely being that anger is a normal reaction to having an ill child but may be unaccept- able to the parent , who denies all anger toward the child ...
... anger toward the adolescent . Several possible explanations were considered , the most likely being that anger is a normal reaction to having an ill child but may be unaccept- able to the parent , who denies all anger toward the child ...
Contents
A Review | 1 |
Survival Rates and Risks | 31 |
Study Methods | 39 |
Copyright | |
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adjustment problems adolescent adult age at diagnosis anger anticipatory grief asked behavior Binger cancer diagnosis cancer experience cancer history cancer patients cancer treatment Chapter chemotherapy child with cancer child's illness childhood cancer survivors children with cancer chlorambucil Chodoff Chronic illness clinical Combined Adjustment Rating concerns coping Cytoxan Death Anxiety denial diagnosis difficulties discussed disease effects fatally ill children fathers feelings former patients function Futterman and Hoffman Hodgkin's disease hospital interview issues Kagen-Goodheart Kaplan Koocher leukemia long-term survivors major marriage married ment Mental Status Examination methotrexate mothers neuroblastoma Non-Hodgkin's lymphomas normal Norman Jaffe parents reported participants Pediatrics percent person physician prognosis psychiatric psychological adjustment psychosocial radiation therapy recurrence relationships remember responses result risk sample scores siblings Sidney Farber significant social Spinetta spouses stress surgery survival survivor registry survivors of childhood symptoms Table told treated variables well-adjusted Wilms's tumor worry