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Parents of child with cancer often perceive their child as vulnerable and are at risk of overprotecting their child because of the challenges associated with the illness. We examined the relationships of perceived child vulnerability, parental overprotection, and parenting stress among Korean parents of a child with cancer. A sample of 163 parents of a child with cancer completed questionnaires. Perceived child vulnerability was associated with parenting stress. Parental overprotection was associated with parental distress and difficult child, but not dysfunctional parent–child interactions. This study emphasizes the need to consider parenting capacity variables in the context of childhood cancer.
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Min Ah Kim
California State University System
Jaehee Yi
University of Victoria
Jina Sang
University of Akron
SAGE Open
Yonsei University
University of Victoria
Sungkyunkwan University
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Kim et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/68e7102ab6db6435876891e2 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1177/21582440241260052
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