Young people's perspectives on open communication between family members when a parent is dying

Objective: Living with a parent who is approaching the end of life is profoundly troubling for young people. Research indicates that family communication about life-limiting parental illness can influence how young people manage living with dying. In particular, open communication between family mem...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Turner, Nicola
Format: Article
Published: Cambridge University Press 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/44763/
_version_ 1848796993372028928
author Turner, Nicola
author_facet Turner, Nicola
author_sort Turner, Nicola
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Objective: Living with a parent who is approaching the end of life is profoundly troubling for young people. Research indicates that family communication about life-limiting parental illness can influence how young people manage living with dying. In particular, open communication between family members has been shown to be helpful. This paper reports on a study of young people’s experiences of family interaction when a parent is dying and considers the practice of open communication in the context of young people’s involvement in giving and receiving family care. Methods: A narrative approach was employed based on in-depth semistructured interviews with 10 young people (aged 13–21) living with a parent thought to be in the last year of life. Results: Young people’s attitudes toward open communication between family members were more ambivalent and ambiguous than previous research suggests. Parental attempts at open communication were sometimes overlooked by young people, indicating that there may be differences between knowledge given and young people’s acknowledgment of sensitive information. Some young people valued open communication as a signifier of the close relationships between family members, while others wanted to exercise more control over what they knew, when, and how. Young people’s accounts challenged the positioning of young people as passive recipients of information. Young people were active in shaping family communication in their everyday lives, and deliberative acts of speaking or remaining silent were one way in which young people exercised care for themselves and others. Significance of Results: This study extends research on communication within families when a parent has a life-limiting illness and suggests that supporting young people’s agency in determining how they receive information may be more beneficial than promoting open communication between family members.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T19:56:48Z
format Article
id nottingham-44763
institution University of Nottingham Malaysia Campus
institution_category Local University
last_indexed 2025-11-14T19:56:48Z
publishDate 2017
publisher Cambridge University Press
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling nottingham-447632020-05-04T18:53:55Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/44763/ Young people's perspectives on open communication between family members when a parent is dying Turner, Nicola Objective: Living with a parent who is approaching the end of life is profoundly troubling for young people. Research indicates that family communication about life-limiting parental illness can influence how young people manage living with dying. In particular, open communication between family members has been shown to be helpful. This paper reports on a study of young people’s experiences of family interaction when a parent is dying and considers the practice of open communication in the context of young people’s involvement in giving and receiving family care. Methods: A narrative approach was employed based on in-depth semistructured interviews with 10 young people (aged 13–21) living with a parent thought to be in the last year of life. Results: Young people’s attitudes toward open communication between family members were more ambivalent and ambiguous than previous research suggests. Parental attempts at open communication were sometimes overlooked by young people, indicating that there may be differences between knowledge given and young people’s acknowledgment of sensitive information. Some young people valued open communication as a signifier of the close relationships between family members, while others wanted to exercise more control over what they knew, when, and how. Young people’s accounts challenged the positioning of young people as passive recipients of information. Young people were active in shaping family communication in their everyday lives, and deliberative acts of speaking or remaining silent were one way in which young people exercised care for themselves and others. Significance of Results: This study extends research on communication within families when a parent has a life-limiting illness and suggests that supporting young people’s agency in determining how they receive information may be more beneficial than promoting open communication between family members. Cambridge University Press 2017-07-03 Article PeerReviewed Turner, Nicola (2017) Young people's perspectives on open communication between family members when a parent is dying. Palliative and Supportive Care . pp. 1-7. ISSN 1478-9523 Young people Communication Parental illness Dying https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/palliative-and-supportive-care/article/young-peoples-perspectives-on-open-communication-between-family-members-when-a-parent-is-dying/7B20AAF166FB6739CD2BBEDED5075311 doi:10.1017/S1478951517000578 doi:10.1017/S1478951517000578
spellingShingle Young people
Communication
Parental illness
Dying
Turner, Nicola
Young people's perspectives on open communication between family members when a parent is dying
title Young people's perspectives on open communication between family members when a parent is dying
title_full Young people's perspectives on open communication between family members when a parent is dying
title_fullStr Young people's perspectives on open communication between family members when a parent is dying
title_full_unstemmed Young people's perspectives on open communication between family members when a parent is dying
title_short Young people's perspectives on open communication between family members when a parent is dying
title_sort young people's perspectives on open communication between family members when a parent is dying
topic Young people
Communication
Parental illness
Dying
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/44763/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/44763/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/44763/