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±èÀ±Á¤ ( Kim Yoon-Jung ) - ¼¿ï¾Æ»êº´¿ø ¼Ò¾ÆÁ¾¾çÇ÷¾×ºÐ°ú
±ÇÇýÁø ( Kwon Hye-Jin ) - Áß¾Ó´ëÇб³ ÀÇ°ú´ëÇÐ °£È£Çаú Â÷Çý°æ ( Cha Hye-Gyeong ) - Áß¾Ó´ëÇб³ °£È£Çаú ±èÁ¤¾Ö ( Kim Chung-Aie ) - Áß¾Ó´ëÇб³ °£È£Çаú ¹ÚÀ±ÀÚ ( Park Yoon-Ja ) - Áß¾Ó´ëÇб³ °£È£Çаú ±èÇýÁø ( Kim Hye-Jin ) - Áß¾Ó´ëÇб³ °£È£Çаú ¼Á¾Áø ( Seo Jong-Jin ) - ¼¿ï¾Æ»êº´¿ø ¼Ò¾ÆÁ¾¾çÇ÷¾×ºÐ°ú
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Abstract
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Purpose: This study was done to evaluate the child cancer survivors¡¯ quality of life on the basis of their own and their parents¡¯ reports.
Methods: This is a descriptive research whereby a structured questionaire was given, upon agreement, to 76 parents and 76 adolescents who were diagnosed as completely cured and remained under follow-up observation as outpatients. The tools adopted in this study included PedsQLTM 4.0 developed by Varni et al. (1999) and a Korean version as revised by Choi(2004). The data collected was subjected to SPSS.
Results: No difference was identified between the quality of life perceived by adolescents and that perceived by their parents (p=.50). The quality of life of adolescents by general characteristics and past history was found to differ, depending upon their current academic status (p=.03), diagnosis, treatment type, time-off treatment and late effects (p=.00, p=.04, p=.01, p=.00). A positive correlation was identified between adolescents¡¯ quality of life and time-off treatment and late effects (r=.30, p=.01). A positive correlation was also identified between adolescents¡¯ quality of life and mothers¡¯ support (r=.34, p=.00).
Conclusion: It is essential that individual nursing intervention models be developed in consideration of the adolescents¡¯ diagnosis of cancer, treatment type, time-off treatment and late effects.
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KeyWords
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û¼Ò³â, Áúº´·Â, ºÎ¸ðÁöÁö, »îÀÇ Áú
Adolescent, Support, Quality of life
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¿ø¹® ¹× ¸µÅ©¾Æ¿ô Á¤º¸
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µîÀçÀú³Î Á¤º¸
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