S. Horowitz et al., IN SICKNESS AND IN HEALTH - A GROUP INTERVENTION FOR SPOUSES CARING FOR PATIENTS WITH BRAIN-TUMORS, Journal of psychosocial oncology, 14(2), 1996, pp. 43-56
The spouses of patients with brain tumors face extraordinary stresses.
As the disease progresses, the patient undergoes profound personality
and behavioral changes, may lose control of bodily functions, and, wi
th the loss of cognitive function, may not recognize the spouse. The c
ourse of the disease is complicated and unpredictable, and as the pati
ent deteriorates, he or she often requires 24-hour supervision. Recogn
izing the needs of spouses who care for brain tumor patients at home,
the Neuro-oncology treatment team at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer C
enter initiated a group to provide practical and emotional support for
them. The group, which lasted for 18 months, helped facilitate the pa
tients' home care and reduced the spouses' anxiety and depression, as
conveyed by the spouses' verbal reports and their reluctance to termin
ate the group. The authors attribute the profound meaning of the group
to its members to therapeutic factors that are unique to the interper
sonal nature of most group processes. These factors include universali
ty, altruism, information, and the instilling of hope. The authors als
o attribute the group's success to the fact that it served as a ''tran
sitional object'' for group members undergoing the painful process of
losing a loved one in piecemeal fashion by providing a surrogate for t
he dying spouse and thereby easing the members' transition from spouse
to widow or widower.