The
Shadow Survivors
A childhood cancer
diagnosis often makes well siblings feel like they’re battling
the disease too.
By Jo Cavallo
Like most high school seniors, Jasmine Brenneman
was looking forward to prom, graduating and going
off to college. But those plans suddenly seemed
in doubt after her younger brother, Josh, now 6,
was diagnosed with Ewing’s sarcoma in 2004,
and much of the responsibility for caring for her
three younger sisters fell to her.
“I didn’t
know what it would mean for me personally and as
time went on, it was a hard struggle because I
had to finish high school, I was working part-time
to get money for school and I was applying for
college scholarships,” says
Jasmine, now 19. “And on top of all that, I had to be there for my younger
sisters and take care of them. Sometimes I didn’t feel that I did that
great a job.”
Jasmine admits she’s angry at the sense of loss she
feels, not just for herself but for Josh too. She lost her senior year in high
school and Josh lost his innocence and childhood. “The main thing for me
that’s so hard
is realizing that our lives will never go back to the way they were before. We
know all the details of what having cancer means. It’s changed us and that’s
a scary thought,” says Jasmine, now a sophomore at Simpson University in
California.
Jasmine is among a growing population of some
18,000 siblings of children diagnosed with cancer
each year, according to a group dubbed SuperSibs!
by founder Melanie Goldish. The organization raises
awareness of the problems these siblings face and
provides support services to them and their families.
The idea to launch SuperSibs! came when Goldish
began noticing behavioral changes in her 4-year-old
son Spencer after her other son Travis was diagnosed
with acute lymphoblastic leukemia in 1998 when
he was 5 years old.
From her observations of Spencer, as
well as other families she talked to, siblings
of cancer patients can experience feelings of anger
and guilt, and their social relationships may suffer. “What
we hear many times from siblings is that although on the outside they look fine,
on the inside they’re shattered
because no one realizes they’re going through the diagnosis too,” says
Goldish, who calls these siblings shadow survivors.
Researchers say how well young
siblings cope in the aftermath of their brother’s
or sister’s cancer diagnosis largely depends on the parents’ reaction
to the illness and how well they communicate information about the child’s
disease. Joanna H. Fanos, PhD, director of The Sibling Center at California Pacific
Medical Center in San Francisco and author of Sibling Loss, says that the family
typically mobilizes around the sick child. “When a lot of time is being
spent on the sick child, and it’s not clear why, the dangerous thing that
can happen is that the well siblings think they don’t count, that they’re
not as lovable, and resentment builds up.” If the lines of communication
stay open, says Dr. Fanos, the well siblings have a better understanding of what’s
occurring and the experience isn’t as detrimental.
Larissa Labay, PsyD,
a pediatric psychologist at Tomorrows Children’s Institute
for Cancer and Blood Disorders at Hackensack University Medical Center in New
Jersey, agrees that children who have a good understanding of their sibling’s
illness and the challenges they face have been shown in the clinic to handle
the family disruption better and can tolerate some of differential parental attention.
Well
siblings getting the support they need can also
be a predictor of fewer behavioral problems. A
recent study in Canada reported that siblings who
received more social support had fewer symptoms
of depression and anxiety and fewer behavioral
problems than siblings without that support. Dr.
Labay conducted a separate study with children
ages 7 to 16 that measured, among other things,
the association between level of empathy and psychological
adjustment among siblings. She found that while
the level of behavioral problems among siblings
with greater empathy didn’t
differ significantly from the norm, there was a difference in terms of their
social competence.
The reasons, according to Dr. Labay, vary. “A
lot of times these kids are pulled out of school or it’s difficult for
their families to take them to their activities like they used to. Also, when
they are engaged in those activities they’re just not as successful because
they may be worried about their brother or sister, or they’re stressed
because their parents haven’t
been around.”
Even for older teenagers like Jasmine, social
interactions can become difficult. Her group of
friends would attempt to comfort her, but Jasmine
says her brother’s
diagnosis “almost put a barrier between us because they didn’t understand.” So
she wrote about what she was feeling—filling six journals in 2004. “I
just needed to get some of the anger, frustration and sadness out.”
The
age of the well child also seems to play a key
role in coping with a sibling’s
illness. “I think there is a big physical component with cancer, and a
lot of the siblings report that seeing the physical changes—such as their
brother or sister losing their hair, looking pale and throwing up—was very
scary for them, particularly for the younger siblings,” says Dr. Labay.
Birth order and the closeness of the relationship before diagnosis also impacts
how well the sibling adjusts to the illness. “If you’re very close
to a brother or sister and that person starts to suffer, it has a greater impact
on you than if you’re really far apart in birth order or if you don’t
have a lot of contact,” says Dr. Labay.
Regardless of where a sibling fits
into the family birth order, it’s likely
that the experience of witnessing the childhood cancer of a brother or sister
will have a permanent impact. Some children, says Dr. Fanos, are so focused on
their sick sibling that they may grow up to be more concerned about taking care
of the needs of others rather than their own needs. Research is now under way
to study the long-term resiliency of these children. Often, the result can be
a tremendous drive to succeed. Dr. Fanos interviewed 30 pediatric oncologists
and found they all had either early health threats to themselves or experiences
with cancer in their family. “Some of them said they had a bad experience
when they were in the hospital, and they vowed that no other child would ever
have that kind of bad experience.”
Although a subset of children will struggle
with their sibling’s illness
and the changes in the family routine, Dr. Labay says the majority of siblings
are able to cope well as long as the family responds to their needs. For Jasmine,
that meant leaving her home in Oregon to attend college in California. “I
was expecting that my mom would be sad because I was leaving, but I saw that
she was really happy. She said that in life there are so many changes that can
happen and this was a good change.”
At the moment, Jasmine Brenneman is
just happy to be able to continue her education
and isn’t thinking too
far ahead. “I’ve learned to appreciate
that every moment is a gift.” |