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“It's a lot of things”: Household material hardship among black and hispanic parents of children with cancer

Valenzuela A, Hawkins A, Revette A, Chen L, Xiong N, Mazzola E, Eche IJ, Karvonen K, Snaman JM, Wolfe J, Bona K, Umaretiya PJ
Pediatric Blood and Cancer

Household material hardship (HMH)—housing, food, transportation, or utility insecurity—is an adverse social determinant of health that is modifiable in the clinical setting. This mixed-methods, single-center study explored the experiences of HMH among Black and Hispanic pediatric oncology parents utilizing a single timepoint survey (N = 60) and semi-structured interviews (N = 20 purposively sampled subcohort). Forty-four (73%) parents reported HMH. Qualitatively, participants expressed stress, anxiety, and embarrassment due to unmet basic resource needs, and childcare emerged as an additional important domain of HMH. Participants recommend a standardized approach to HMH screening and resource allocation, offering insight into targets for future intervention.

Valenzuela A, Hawkins A, Revette A, et al. “It's a lot of things”: Household material hardship among black and hispanic parents of children with cancer. Pediatric Blood and Cancer. 2023:e30485. Epub ahead of print. DOI:10.1002/pbc.30485. PMID: 37312643

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Publication year
Resource type
Peer Reviewed Research
Outcomes
Social Needs/ SDH
Patient Experience of Care
Population
Children and Youth
Screening research
Yes
Social Determinant of Health
Food/Hunger
Housing Stability
Transportation
Utilities
Study design
Other Study Design