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Caring for Child With Cancer Increases Mental Health Care Utilization for Parents

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Increases seen in total mental health-related visits as well as anxiety- or depression-related visits

By Lori Solomon HealthDay Reporter

TUESDAY, April 9, 2024 (HealthDay News) — Privately insured parents caring for a child with cancer have a higher likelihood of utilizing mental health (MH) care than other parents, according to a study published online April 2 in JAMA Network Open.

Xin Hu, Ph.D., from University of Virginia in Charlottesville, and colleagues assessed use of MH services among parents of children with versus without cancer. The analysis included data from 4,837 families of children with cancer and 24,185 families of children without cancer identified using the Merative MarketScan Commercial Claims Database.

The researchers found that the probabilities of parents having anxiety-related visits (10.6 versus 7.0 percent), depression-related visits (8.4 versus 6.1 percent), and any MH-related visits (18.1 versus 13.3 percent) were higher in families of children with versus without cancer. The probabilities of one or both parents having anxiety-related visits, depression-related visits, and any MH-related visits showed absolute increases of 3.2 percentage points (45.7 percent relative increase), 2.2 percentage points (36.1 percent relative increase), and 4.2 percentage points (31.3 percent relative increase), respectively, in adjusted analyses among families of children with versus without cancer. Magnitudes of such differences were greater among mothers than fathers.

“These findings suggest that targeted interventions to provide counseling and support are warranted to better meet MH care needs among parents and caregivers of children with cancer,” the authors write.

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