MONDAY, June 28 (HealthDay News) -- More than 1.5 million adult cancer
survivors in the United States are parents who live with one or more
children younger than 18 years old, finds a new study.
The findings may lead to greater assistance for these patients and
their families, said Kathryn Weaver, of Wake Forest University Baptist
Medical Center in Winston-Salem, N.C., and colleagues.
The researchers analyzed data from 13,385 adult cancer survivors who
took part in the United States National Health Interview Survey between
2000 and 2007. They found that about 18 percent of newly diagnosed cancer
survivors and 14 percent of all U.S. cancer survivors live with one or
more of their minor children. The percentages mean that there are about
1.58 million adult cancer survivors living with 2.85 million children
under age 18. An estimated 562,000 minor children are living with a parent
in the early phases of cancer treatment and recovery.
The study also found that most cancer survivors living with their minor
children are female (78.9 percent), married (69.8 percent), and under 50
years of age (85.8 percent). Of the children of cancer survivors, 30.5
percent were under 6 years of age at the time of their parent's cancer
diagnosis and 33.4 percent were born after the diagnosis.
A cancer diagnosis poses extraordinary challenges for people with young
children, including worries about not living to see their children grow
up. "Greater awareness of the number and characteristics of cancer
survivors living with minor children may facilitate clinical screening and
referral efforts, inform public health planning, and stimulate research on
these understudied families," the researchers concluded.
The study appears online June 28 in the journal Cancer.
More information
The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has more about cancer survivors.
Copyright © 2012HealthDay. All rights reserved.