Impact of the family communication environment on burden and clinical communication in blood cancer caregiving Journal Article


Authors: Campbell-Salome, G.; Fisher, C. L.; Wright, K. B.; Lincoln, G.; Applebaum, A. J.; Sae-Hau, Maria; Weiss, E. S.; Bylund, C. L.
Article Title: Impact of the family communication environment on burden and clinical communication in blood cancer caregiving
Abstract: Objective We examined the effects of the family communication environment (conversation orientation) on adult child caregivers' burden and clinical interactions and if the effects are mediated by openness to communicate about cancer, avoidant cancer communication, and social support (SS). Method Caregivers of a parent diagnosed with a blood cancer (N = 121) completed an online survey of validated measures of conversation orientation (i.e., the extent to which families openly communicate), SS, cancer openness, avoidance, caregiver burden, clinical communication skills, and quality of clinical interactions (QCI). Results Conversation orientation had significant indirect effects on caregiver burden, mediated by SS (beta = -0.11, p < 0.001), as well as cancer openness and avoidance (beta = -0.07, p < 0.001). Conversation orientation also had significant indirect effects on caregivers' communication skills with a parent's clinician, mediated by avoidance (beta = 0.08, p < 0.01) and SS (beta = 0.06, p < 0.001). Finally, conversation orientation had significant indirect effects on caregivers' QCI mediated by avoidance (beta = 0.71, p < 0.05). Conclusions Adult child caregivers whose families communicate more openly exhibit less caregiver burden and report better clinical interaction skills and perceived quality of the clinical interaction. Avoidance emerged as a key mediating factor. Caregivers from less open communication environments may benefit from interventions that help them navigate challenging but critical caregiving conversations. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved)
Keywords: oncology; social support; hematologic malignancy; caregiver burden; family communication; clinical communication; caregiving; cancer; blood cancer; openness
Journal Title: Psycho-Oncology
Volume: 31
Issue: 7
ISSN: 1057-9249
Publisher: John Wiley & Sons  
Date Published: 2022-07-01
Start Page: 1212
End Page: 1220
ACCESSION: 2022-41407-001
DOI: 10.1002/pon.5910
PROVIDER: Ovid Technologies
PROVIDER: psycinfo
PUBMED: 35218278
PMCID: PMC9262857
DOI/URL:
Notes: Available online ahead of print -- Source: APA PsycInfo
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  1. Allison Joyce Applebaum
    191 Applebaum