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CULTURAL CONSIDERATIONS IN PEDIATRIC CANCER Wendy N. Gray, Ph.D.

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Page 1: Cultural Considerations in pediatric cancer - websitePEDIATRIC CANCER Wendy N. Gray, Ph.D. WHY STUDY CULTURE IN ONCOLOGY? •Cancer is a family disease •Families exist within a broader

CULTURAL CONSIDERATIONS IN PEDIATRIC CANCERWendy N. Gray, Ph.D.

Page 2: Cultural Considerations in pediatric cancer - websitePEDIATRIC CANCER Wendy N. Gray, Ph.D. WHY STUDY CULTURE IN ONCOLOGY? •Cancer is a family disease •Families exist within a broader

WHY STUDY CULTURE IN ONCOLOGY?

• Cancer is a family disease

• Families exist within a broader cultural system

• Increasing diversity within patients diagnosed with cancer

• Known health disparities

Page 3: Cultural Considerations in pediatric cancer - websitePEDIATRIC CANCER Wendy N. Gray, Ph.D. WHY STUDY CULTURE IN ONCOLOGY? •Cancer is a family disease •Families exist within a broader

CULTURE IMPACTS THE CANCER EXPERIENCE

• Illness Representations

• Illness Disclosure

• Complementary and Alternative Medicine Use

• Coping

• End of Life/Bereavement

Page 4: Cultural Considerations in pediatric cancer - websitePEDIATRIC CANCER Wendy N. Gray, Ph.D. WHY STUDY CULTURE IN ONCOLOGY? •Cancer is a family disease •Families exist within a broader

ILLNESS REPRESENTATIONS

• Illness stigma• High levels of stigma in Asian cultures. Why?• Implications of stigma?

• Illness conceptualizations• Hot-cold theory of disease• Implications?

• Illness attributions• Self-blame or guilt

Page 5: Cultural Considerations in pediatric cancer - websitePEDIATRIC CANCER Wendy N. Gray, Ph.D. WHY STUDY CULTURE IN ONCOLOGY? •Cancer is a family disease •Families exist within a broader

IMPLICATIONS FOR CARE

• Stigma, guilt, self-blame can limit one’s ability to see out/utilize social support

• Western medicine – open dialogue vs. cultural beliefs• Undermine educational efforts

• Impact on treatment seeking behavior• Complementary and alternative medicine use

Page 6: Cultural Considerations in pediatric cancer - websitePEDIATRIC CANCER Wendy N. Gray, Ph.D. WHY STUDY CULTURE IN ONCOLOGY? •Cancer is a family disease •Families exist within a broader

ILLNESS DISCLOSURE• Lower rates of disclosure

to child in some cultures

• Consequences of non-disclosure?

• Differences in amount of information disclosed

Page 7: Cultural Considerations in pediatric cancer - websitePEDIATRIC CANCER Wendy N. Gray, Ph.D. WHY STUDY CULTURE IN ONCOLOGY? •Cancer is a family disease •Families exist within a broader

IMPLICATIONS FOR CARE

• Contrasting beliefs about disclosure can lead to conflict

• Culture of silence and impact on children

Page 8: Cultural Considerations in pediatric cancer - websitePEDIATRIC CANCER Wendy N. Gray, Ph.D. WHY STUDY CULTURE IN ONCOLOGY? •Cancer is a family disease •Families exist within a broader

COMPLEMENTARY & ALTERNATIVE MEDICINE

(CAM)• Western medicine is 1st

line approach• CAM used as an adjunct

treatment• Prevalence• Type• Disclosure

Page 9: Cultural Considerations in pediatric cancer - websitePEDIATRIC CANCER Wendy N. Gray, Ph.D. WHY STUDY CULTURE IN ONCOLOGY? •Cancer is a family disease •Families exist within a broader
Page 10: Cultural Considerations in pediatric cancer - websitePEDIATRIC CANCER Wendy N. Gray, Ph.D. WHY STUDY CULTURE IN ONCOLOGY? •Cancer is a family disease •Families exist within a broader

GEOGRAPHIC DIFFERENCES IN CAM

Geographic Region Most Common Form of CAM

Asia, Middle East, Mexico Dietary & herbal supplements to counteract “hot” nature of cancer

Europe & North America (excluding Mexico)

Vitamins & “mind-body” treatments

Page 11: Cultural Considerations in pediatric cancer - websitePEDIATRIC CANCER Wendy N. Gray, Ph.D. WHY STUDY CULTURE IN ONCOLOGY? •Cancer is a family disease •Families exist within a broader

CAM DISCLOSURE

• Disclosure to medical team uncommon

• Why?

• Implications of non-disclosure

Page 12: Cultural Considerations in pediatric cancer - websitePEDIATRIC CANCER Wendy N. Gray, Ph.D. WHY STUDY CULTURE IN ONCOLOGY? •Cancer is a family disease •Families exist within a broader

COPING

• Coping styles

• Social support

• Somatization• Sleep difficulties (40-76%)• Loss of appetite (44-76%)• Weight loss (60-95%)• Headaches (47-77%)

Page 13: Cultural Considerations in pediatric cancer - websitePEDIATRIC CANCER Wendy N. Gray, Ph.D. WHY STUDY CULTURE IN ONCOLOGY? •Cancer is a family disease •Families exist within a broader

IMPLICATIONS FOR CARE

• Provide culturally-acceptable sources of social support

• Revisit need for support over time

• Awareness of culturally-specific physical manifestations of stress = earlier intervention and support

Page 14: Cultural Considerations in pediatric cancer - websitePEDIATRIC CANCER Wendy N. Gray, Ph.D. WHY STUDY CULTURE IN ONCOLOGY? •Cancer is a family disease •Families exist within a broader

END OF LIFE

• Communication surrounding death

• Reaction to death and expressions of grief

Page 15: Cultural Considerations in pediatric cancer - websitePEDIATRIC CANCER Wendy N. Gray, Ph.D. WHY STUDY CULTURE IN ONCOLOGY? •Cancer is a family disease •Families exist within a broader

IMPLICATIONS FOR CARE

• Communicating difficult news in a culturally-appropriate way

• Cultural expectations for remaining in contact with family after child’s death

Page 16: Cultural Considerations in pediatric cancer - websitePEDIATRIC CANCER Wendy N. Gray, Ph.D. WHY STUDY CULTURE IN ONCOLOGY? •Cancer is a family disease •Families exist within a broader

ROLE OF ACCULTURATION

• Individuals vary in their level of retention of their native culture

• Degree of acculturation varies across patients and within the same family

• Process of acculturation is its own stressor

Page 17: Cultural Considerations in pediatric cancer - websitePEDIATRIC CANCER Wendy N. Gray, Ph.D. WHY STUDY CULTURE IN ONCOLOGY? •Cancer is a family disease •Families exist within a broader

CONCLUSIONS

• Limitations of existing literature• Culture issues given less attention in Western research

literature• Intersectionality

Page 18: Cultural Considerations in pediatric cancer - websitePEDIATRIC CANCER Wendy N. Gray, Ph.D. WHY STUDY CULTURE IN ONCOLOGY? •Cancer is a family disease •Families exist within a broader