Perceived Needs of Parents Caring for Children With Cancer in Saudi Arabia: A Cross-Sectional Study
Hanan Alshammari, Hebah Almulla, Fatimah A. Alnass, Sama S. Hammad

TL;DR
This study identifies the needs of parents in Saudi Arabia caring for children with cancer, highlighting the importance of information and support.
Contribution
The study is the first to use the FIN-PED II tool in Saudi Arabia to assess parents' needs for their children with cancer.
Findings
Parents identified all 17 needs as necessary, with the highest priority on information about their child's condition and treatment.
A significant unmet need was guidance for helping other children cope, reported by 60.8% of parents.
Time since diagnosis was the only significant predictor of the need for additional care information in the first 6 months.
Abstract
Although global research highlights the psychological, informational, and financial strains faced by parents of children with cancer, studies from Saudi Arabia remain scarce. This study aimed to (1) describe and assess the needs of parents caring for children undergoing cancer therapy in Saudi Arabia, (2) evaluate their requirements for additional information regarding these needs, and (3) identify illness-related and demographic factors that predict the demand for this information. A total of 130 parents of children diagnosed with cancer and undergoing active treatment were recruited from a tertiary cancer hospital in Saudi Arabia for this descriptive, cross-sectional study. The Family Inventory of Needs-Pediatric II (FIN-PED II) was used to collect data through an online survey. Parents deemed all 17 needs in the FIN-PED II necessary, with mean scores ranging from 2.68 to 3.62. The…
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Taxonomy
TopicsChildhood Cancer Survivors' Quality of Life · Family Support in Illness · Pediatric Pain Management Techniques
