Authors
Anna Katharina Vokinger, Eddy Carolina Pedraza, Peter Francis Raguindin, Eva Maria Tinner, André Oscar von Bueren, Katrin Scheinemann, Eva Bergstraesser, Gisela Michel, Eva De Clercq
Published in
BMC psychology. Jul 13, 2026. Epub Jul 13, 2026.
Abstract
The death of a child has a tremendous impact on fathers' lives. However, their grief experiences remain understudied in pediatric palliative care and childcare research. The aim of this study is to provide insight into bereaved fathers' experiences following the death of their child to cancer, and to explore their support needs and wishes.
Semi-structured qualitative interviews were conducted with bereaved fathers. Data collection occurred from March 2022 to September 2023, and reflexive thematic analysis was used for data analysis.
Many bereaved fathers reported a reorientation of self, a shift in their priorities, and newfound kindness towards themselves and others. At the same time, the death of their child also led to feelings of helplessness and failure in their role as fathers. Some fathers expressed a death wish to reunite with their child and some fathers described how they lost the meaning of their lives. Fathers' grief experiences and coping strategies often differed from that of their partner. In terms of support, many fathers expressed that it was better to have many support options offered to choose from than to have to reach out on their own.
In their bereavement, participating fathers reported shifts in their sense of self and priorities while navigating emotions of failure and newfound kindness. These experiences were compounded by limited access to preferred support. To be adequately cared for, fathers should be given the opportunity to express themselves freely.
PMID:
42444016
Bibliographic data and abstract were imported from PubMed on 14 Jul 2026.
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