Family communication patterns after melanoma diagnosis Journal Article


Authors: Hay, J.; Shuk, E.; Zapolska, J.; Ostroff, J.; Lischewski, J.; Brady, M. S.; Berwick, M.
Article Title: Family communication patterns after melanoma diagnosis
Abstract: To examine health communication in families after cancer diagnosis, we conducted qualitative interviews examining communication processes among recently diagnosed melanoma patients and one of their adult children. Communication regarding melanoma and prevention is common in these families, yet adherence to recommended prevention and screening behaviors is inconsistent. Our study objectives were to examine processes regarding disclosure of the melanoma diagnosis, responses to this information in family members, and processes by which families encourage melanoma prevention and screening behaviors, specifically, sun protection and skin cancer screening. Participants were recruited during their melanoma surgical follow-up appointment, and included nineteen families. Thematic content analysis was conducted via team and individual coding. The findings reveal that intimacy and emotional closeness, gender, communication style, convenience/proximity, the presence of closed relationships, and perceived negative effects of the news impacted disclosure of the family melanoma diagnosis. Anxiety and increased informational needs were the primary responses in family members hearing about the diagnosis. Encouragement to adopt protective behaviors was achieved through risk awareness, ad-hoc reminders, scare tactics, and actually performing the health behavior. The communication challenges and opportunities presented by our findings may further inform physician counseling and health education strategies for cancer families.
Keywords: adult; aged; aged, 80 and over; health behavior; videorecording; communication; attitude to illness; family relations; descriptive statistics; funding source; middle age; scales; family -- psychosocial factors; melanoma -- psychosocial factors; adult children; audiorecording; content analysis; family attitudes; interview guides; melanoma -- prevention and control; qualitative studies; semi-structured interview; thematic analysis
Journal Title: Journal of Family Communication
Volume: 9
Issue: 4
ISSN: 1526-7431
Publisher: Taylor & Francis Group  
Date Published: 2009-10-01
Start Page: 209
End Page: 232
Language: English
PROVIDER: EBSCOhost
PROVIDER: cin20
DOI/URL:
Notes: --- - "Accession Number: 2010443434" - "Entry Date: 20091127" - "Revision Date: 20091218" - "Publication Type: journal article; research; tables/charts" - "Journal Subset: Biomedical; Blind Peer Reviewed; Online/Print; Peer Reviewed; USA" - "Special Interest: Psychiatry/Psychology" - "Grant Information: NIH" - "Source: cin20"