Video Abstract

Video Abstract

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CONTEXT

Loss of a child to a life-limiting condition (LLC) is 1 of the most traumatic life events for parents. Research focusing on fathers’ experiences is in its infancy.

OBJECTIVES

Using a meta-ethnographic approach, we systematically reviewed the literature around fathers’ predeath and postdeath experiences of loss and grief.

DATA SOURCES

We searched Medline, Scopus, Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature, and Science Direct, and used the meta-ethnography reporting guidelines; the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses; and sampling strategy, type of study, approaches, range of years, limits, inclusion and exclusions, terms used, and electronic sources recommendations.

STUDY SELECTION

We used the Guide to Children’s Palliative Care and the directory of LLCs to select qualitative articles published up until the end of March 2023 that described fathers’ predeath and postdeath experiences of loss and grief after their child’s LLC. We excluded studies that failed to differentiate outcomes between mothers and fathers.

DATA EXTRACTION

Extracted data included study details, participants’ characteristics, response rate, source of participants, method and time of data collection, children’s characteristics, and quality assessment. First-order and second-order data were also extracted.

RESULTS

Forty studies informed a FATHER model of loss and grief. This highlights both similarities (ambivalence, trauma responses, fatigue, anxiety, unresolved grief, guilt) and distinct features defining the predeath and postdeath experiences of loss and grief.

LIMITATIONS

There was a bias toward greater mother participation in research. Specific categories of fathers remain underrepresented in palliative care literature.

CONCLUSIONS

Many fathers experience disenfranchised grief and deterioration in mental health after a child’s diagnosis and postdeath. Our model opens possibilities for personalized clinical support in the palliative care system for fathers.

Diagnosis of a life-limiting condition (LLC) in pediatrics impacts the entire family1 ; loss of a child to an LLC is 1 of the most traumatic life events for parents. Grief begins shortly after receiving the diagnosis or prognosis,2  and continues through the child’s progressive deterioration and after their death.3  This complex process of reactions to loss results in poor quality of life, with up to 25% of parents reporting serious emotional dysregulation.4 

Bereavement research is a relatively young discipline. Historically, 75% of studied parents have been mothers,5  whereas research focusing solely on fathers is in its infancy; their specific loss and grief experiences remain underinvestigated. Grief is strongly influenced by gender role socialization, and shifts in the traditional roles of mother and father6  require health care services to be responsive to this trend. Although guidelines7  recommend bereavement care to both parents during end of life,8  this is not yet routinely implemented in most hospitals.9  Health care professionals (HCPs) often feel ill-equipped10  because they lack intervention protocols,11  are concerned about parental readiness for participation in the anticipatory/advanced care planning,12,13  or feel insecure because of ambivalent14  or diverse emotional responses3  to loss. Although parents may need extensive support to cope with trauma1517  and anxiety,1820  and to adjust gradually to their loss after diagnosis, support services provided by hospices predominantly focus on the postdeath grief symptoms.21,22 

Understanding the characteristics of fathers’ loss and grief during the predeath and postdeath journeys contributes to more individualized care. Synthesizing available qualitative evidence is, therefore, timely to enhance the usability of research to date in developing, evaluating, and implementing psychological/behavioral interventions and best clinical practices. Although a previous systematic review assessed quantitative and qualitative literature5  around fathers’ grief and bereavement, it included various causes of a child’s loss and examined outcomes in the postdeath period. Given the increasing incidence of pediatric LLCs12,23  and the expanding body of qualitative research examining parents’ experiences in such circumstances, this study aims to generate an evidence-based model that provides an in-depth assembly of the current state of knowledge around fathers’ experiences of predeath and postdeath loss and grief.

Noblit and Hare’s24  7-stage meta-ethnographic approach was used to synthesize included studies (Supplemental Fig 3). The meta-ethnography reporting guidance25,26 ; the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses27 ; and sampling strategy, type of study, approaches, range of years, limits, inclusion and exclusions, terms used, and electronic sources28  recommendations informed the synthesis. The study protocol was registered in the International Prospective Register of Systematic Reviews before study commencing (registration #CRD42021233258; see Supplemental Table 5).

We used Medline, Scopus, Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature, and Science Direct for an initial bibliographic search. Hand searches of articles cited in reference lists and from relevant review articles5  added to the search strategy. Studies were included up until the end of March 2023; no temporal limits were used. Search terms are available from the InterTASC Information Specialists’ Sub-Group Search Filter Resource (www.york.ac.uk/inst/crd/intertasc/) and informed the search syntax (Supplemental Materials).

Studies were included if they were:

  1. published full-text, peer-reviewed, qualitative articles exploring fathers’ experiences of loss (while the child was still alive) and bereavement;

  2. conducted in palliative care units/hospitals, in the transitional phase between hospital and home, and at home, regardless of country/setting/level of palliative care; and

  3. written in English.

Studies were excluded if:

  1. they failed to differentiate outcomes between mothers and fathers;

  2. they used quantitative methods/systematic/narrative reviews/gray literature; and

  3. they did not include children with LLCs.

Selection of relevant articles was informed by the Guide to Children’s Palliative Care12  and the directory of LLCs.29 

Search results were collated in an Excel spreadsheet. A total of 938 articles were identified for review (after removal of 99 duplicates). Titles and abstracts were screened independently by the first and second authors. A total of 794 articles were removed during title and abstract screening. The remaining 144 were reviewed in full, with further exclusions based on stated inclusion/exclusion criteria. Any discrepancies were resolved by consensus. Forty articles were included in the meta-ethnography (Fig 1). Extracted data included study details, participants’ characteristics, response rate, source of participants, method and time of data collection, and children’s characteristics. First-order (full replication of participants’ experiences expressed in original quotations) and second-order (authors’ interpretations and conceptualizations) data were used across the studies.24,25  Data were extracted in thematic tables. Where studies included both parents, only father data were extracted.

FIGURE 1

Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses flowchart. Presentation of Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses flowchart, including database sources, articles screened, full-text assessment, rationale for excluded studies, and final studies included in this systematic review.

FIGURE 1

Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses flowchart. Presentation of Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses flowchart, including database sources, articles screened, full-text assessment, rationale for excluded studies, and final studies included in this systematic review.

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Quality appraisal was conducted by the first and second authors by using the Critical Appraisal Skills Program checklist (https://casp-uk.net/casp-tools-checklists/). Studies were not excluded on the basis of given mean scores, because a Critical Appraisal Skills Program cutoff point has not been recommended previously.30,31  Thirty-nine studies (Supplemental Table 6) were of high quality (score ≥80%). Only 1 study32  scored ≥70%, but was still considered to contribute valuable findings to the existing knowledge. In general, authors needed to provide clearer details in their studies regarding recruitment strategy, relationship between the researcher and participants, and rigor of data analysis.

The first- and second-order constructs were thematically analyzed and organized into categories through constant comparison.30,33  This helped to identify whether constructs corresponded (reciprocal translation); explained differences, exceptions, incongruities, and inconsistencies (refutational translation); or expressed different aspects of the topic (line of argument).11  Where varied labels were used for the same phenomenon, we compared the constructs to identify patterns of shared meaning. For example, if 1 study reported that fathers felt supported by their network14,34,35  and another highlighted unhelpful support,15,36  these were considered refutational and translated into a new construct incorporating elements of both (eg, “support: positive and negative”). However, if in a third study,37  fathers reported negative support, but shifted to seeking and receiving positive support, all 3 interpretations were treated as reciprocal and translated into a construct encompassing all 3 (eg, “endurance and coping”). Subconstructs were also developed; these helped reconfirm the construct names in the final list and explore the lines of argument.

Interpretations were treated as metaphors to enable the comparative translation of 1 study into others. Where possible, we have used the wording of participants and the exact messages of the categories to retain the holism of fathers’ narratives.24  The development of the conceptual analysis was iterative, collaborative, and grounded in the original data.31  Five criteria defined the adequacy of metaphors38,39 : economy (simplicity and superiority of representation), cogency (without redundancy, ambiguity and contradiction), range (incorporating other symbolic domains), apparency (language “showing” rather than “referring to” experience), and credibility (understandable by the reading audience).

During the synthesis, it was apparent that the concepts describing “circles of hope,” “control/normality,” and “endurance and coping: loss-orientated versus restoration” (Supplemental Table 7) were not contradictory in nature; rather, they described alternate perspectives of the same phenomenon. Therefore, a line of argument synthesis, rather than a refutational synthesis, was most appropriate for the aim of our study.40 

In analyzing the data, managing unconscious bias around gender norms became particularly salient. To minimize bias, we employed several verification strategies to ensure rigor of the analysis,41  including methodological coherence, the iterative interaction between data and analysis, thinking theoretically, and taking a coresearcher approach. Employing a mixed-gender research team enabled us to be open to different interpretations and multiple meanings of the text.42  Analysis cross-checking by both male and female authors and corresponding reflections on several occasions enabled us to affirm and challenge each other’s interpretations of the data and to become aware of “unconscious editing” because of our own sensitivities. Thinking theoretically required a deliberated move between a micro perspective of the data and macro conceptual understanding42  of the fathers’ experiences of loss and grief, thus making constant comparisons of the data while building the FATHER model. We arrived at a set of shared interpretations that were insight-rich and grounded in the data. Where possible, we have used the wording of participants to stay close to fathers’ narratives. In these accounts, fathers used the word “battle(s)” or synonyms (eg, “confrontation”) to describe their loss and grief journey.6,16,37 

Studies were conducted in the United States (130 fathers [33%], 8 of 9 studies); Canada (119 fathers [31%], 12 studies); the United Kingdom, Ireland, and Wales (62 fathers [16%], 10 studies); Europe (40 fathers [11%], 6 studies); Australia (23 fathers [6%], 2 studies); and Asia (10 fathers [3%], 1 study). Twenty-nine studies (72%) interviewed both parents; 11 focused solely on fathers. A total of 384 fathers were included in total through a range of interviews, observations, and open-ended questionnaires (excluding 5 studies not specifying father sample size). Six studies included fathers aged >50 years; 18 studies (45%) did not specify their age. Data collection time was not reported in 19 studies; in 16 studies, it varied between 1 and 24 months after the child’s death. Children’s diagnoses included hemato-oncological (10 studies) and heart/cardiac (9 studies) diseases, cystic fibrosis (2 studies), and a range of other LLCs (24 studies). Although these conditions have varying morbidity, they share the similarity of potential decreased lifespan and likelihood of early death.43  Four studies did not specify diagnosis type (Table 1).

TABLE 1

Demographics

SourceSample SizeResponse RateAge (Fathers)Source of ParticipantsData CollectionTime of Data CollectionChild DiagnosisChild AgeChild GenderQuality Score
Aho et al, 2006, Finland 8 fathers N/A 29–49 (M = 35) N/A Survey and interview 2.5 mo–2.5 y postdeath Heart defect, cot death, kidney and congenital heart disease, severe handicap, premature birth All <3 y old N/A 27b,c 
Aho et al, 2009, Finland 8 fathers 80% 29–49 (M = 35) Online group for parents Survey and interview 2.5 mo–2 y postdeath 64% heart defect; other diagnoses: premature birth, congenital kidney disease, cot death, and severe handicap 40 min–2.3 y N/A 28c 
Alam et al, 2012, Canada 13 fathers, 18 mothers 69% M = 46.6 Pediatric hospital Semistructured interview 6,12, and 18 mo postchild death Leukemia and CNS tumors 8 mo–20.7 y N/A 30c 
Armentrout, 2009, United States N = 15; 4 couples, 7 mothers N/A 27–42 (M = 31.6) Online support group Narrative interviews 0.5–12 y postchild’s death LLCs 10 infants: 2–12 d; 2 infants: 1 1/2–2 mo N/A 26c 
Azeez et al, 2022, Australia 10 fathers 71% 31–42 (M = 35) N/A Semistructured interview 1–12 y postdeath N/A 30 min–27 d N/A 27c 
Bailey-Pearce et al, 2018, United Kingdom 7 fathers 35% 27–54 Local nursing team Narrative interview N/A N/A N/A N/A 27b 
Barrera et al, 2007, Canada 7 fathers, 13 mothers 71% 31.92–48.08 Pediatric hospital Semistructured interview 9–14 mo post child death Cancer, congenital heart disease, meningitis, drowning 9 d–17.83 y 9 girls, 6 boys 30c 
Barrera et al, 2009, Canada 8 mothers, 13 fathers 69% 32–65 (M = 46.6) E-mail 5 mo post child death Semistructured interview 6 mo post child death Leukemia, CNS tumors, Hurler’s disease, sarcomas, neuroblastomas, non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma 8 mo–20.7 y (M = 9.2 y) N/A 30c 
Beecham et al, 2017, United Kingdom 13 mothers, 2 fathers, 3 dyads 36% N/A Metropolitan specialist palliative care service Semistructured interview 6–10 mo post child death Neurology, gastroenterology, metabolic, chromosomal abnormality, oncology, immunology, respiratory 0–1 y = 2, 1–4 y = 2, 4–12 y = 6 12–17 y = 8 9 girls, 9 boys 30b 
Buzgova et al, 2015, Czech Republic 7 mothers, 1 father N/A 32–60 N/A Interview N/A 2 with cancer, others with noncancer diagnosis 1 mo–16 y 4 boys, 4 girls 24b 
Cadell et al, 2012, Canadaa 47 parents interviewed N/A M = 41.74 Academic and clinical sites Semistructured interview N/A LLCs 6 mo–20 y N/A 28c 
Caicedo et al, 2019, United States 70 mothers, 26 fathers 32% N/A Online obituary notices Open-ended interview 2, 4, 6, and13 mo post child death All children generic LLCs 37% teens, 37% infant, 21% school 5% preschool N/A 23c 
Cantwell-Bartl, 2018, Australia 16 mothers, 13 fathers N/A N/A Pediatric hospital Semistructured interviews N/A Hypoplastic left heart syndrome 14 mo–19 y N/A 24b 
Cook, 1988, United States 55 fathers 50% N/A Pediatric hospital (e-mail) Interview open-ended questionnaire 10 mo–5 y post child death Cancer N/A 60% boys, 40% girls 25b,c 
Davies et al, 2003, Wales 30 families N/A N/A Professional network In-depth interview N/A N/A N/A N/A 28b 
Davies et al, 2004, United States 8 fathers 53% 34–39 Pediatric hospice home care program Unstructured interview N/A Cancer, spinal muscular atrophy, Tay Sachs 3 mo–14 y 4 girls, 4boys 30b 
Dutta et al, 2020, Singapore 6 couples, 13 mothers, 4 fathers, 2 parental figures 80% M = 49.35 Hospice care, Children’s Cancer Foundation, Club Rainbow Semistructured interviews 1 mo–1 y post child death All children LLCs M = 12.06 y N/A 30c 
Fernández-Ávalos et al, 2020, Spain 5 fathers, 11 mothers N/A M = 65 M = 65 Semistructured interviews N/A 5, learning disability from birth; 11, leaning disability after birth 18 and 40 y (M = 32.3; SD = 6.96) N/A 26b 
Fortney et al, 2020, United States 30 mothers, 16 fathers 12.45% M = 38.86 NICU Interview 37.06–38.45 mo postdeath Congenital anomalies, cardiac and respiratory conditions M = 40.90 d 52% girls 30b 
Gilmer et al, 2012, Canada 36 mothers, 22 fathers, 39 siblings 68% M = 43.9 Oncology unit Semistructured interviews 6–19 mo post child death Cancer M = 12 y N/A 26c 
Heller et al, 2005, United States 23 mothers, 10 fathers, 3 relatives 26% N/A Pediatric teaching hospitals Open-ended interview Median 7–8 mo post child death All generic LLCs <12 mo 16 boys, 18 girls 25c 
Jordan et al, 2015, Ireland 16 mothers, 9 fathers N/A N/A Hospital and hospice Interviews 6–24 mo post child death LLCs 1–10 y: 1; 10–18y: 10 8 boys, 8 girls 29b,c 
Koch et al, 2021, United Statesa 61 parents N/A N/A Academic medical center Semistructured interviews 2008–2011. No further information. Premature infants, complex cardiac conditions; with/requiring bone marrow transplant N/A N/A 25b 
Lowton, 2009, United Kingdom N = 32 parents, 9 fathers 12% N/A Invitation by Cystic fibrosis Trust In-depth interview 1 y–6 y postdeath Cystic fibrosis 17–36 y N/A 27b 
Mendizabal-Espinosa et al, 2021, United Kingdom 2 fathers, 3 mothers N/A N/A Hospices In-depth interview N/A LLC diagnosed during pregnancy and at birth N/A N/A 25b 
Menezes, 2010, United Kingdom 11 children, 11 siblings, 10 mothers, 7 fathers 10 families took part; 2 declined N/A Association for children with LLCs Interview and participant observation N/A Different LLCs 2-6 y: 4; 7–11 y: 3; 12–18 y: 4 N/A 25b 
Mitchell et al, 2019, United Kingdom 6 fathers, 11 mothers 12% N/A PICU mortality database Semistructured interview M = 11.8 mo post child death Different LLCs 5 mo–3 y N/A 30b 
Moola et al, 2011, Canada N = 29 (sample was gender-balanced) N/A 35–55 N/A Semistructured interview N/A Cystic fibrosis, congenital heart disease 10–18 y N/A 29b 
Nicholas et al, 2009, Canada 16 fathers N/A 20–60 (M = 43) Pediatric hospital Semistructured interview N/A Cancer (leukemia or oncological disease) M = 1–17 y N/A 30b 
Nicholas et al, 2016, Canada 18 fathers N/A N/A HCP Semistructured interviews >3 mo postdeath (6 fathers) All children LLC 9–17 y N/A 29b 
Price et al, 2011, United Kingdom 16 mothers, 9 fathers 66% families N/A N/A Semistructured interviews 10–23 mo post child death Cancer and nonmalignant disorders 2 mo–1 y = 5, 1 y–5 y = 1, 12 y–15 y = 5, 16–20 y = 3 8 boys, 8 girls 29b 
Proulx et al, 2016, Canada 13 fathers 81% 32–58 PICU at a health center Semistructured interviews 2–7 y post child death Complex chronic condition or a sudden illness 1–16 y N/A 30c 
Raingruber et al, 2007, United States 4 mothers, 3 fathers 66% families 28–45 Through health professional Semistructured interview N/A All children generic LLCs Child 1 and 4 alive at interview; no age. Child 2–20 d; child 3–5 d N/A 25c 
Rempel et al, 2007, Canada 9 mothers, 7 fathers N/A 30–50 Tertiary referral center Unstructured interview N/A Hypoplastic left heart syndrome 2 mo–5 y 3 boys, 6 girls 26b 
Rempel et al, 2012, Canada 15 mothers, 10 fathers 15 out of 23 families 27–37 (M = 32) Nurse practitioner Open-ended interview N/A Hypoplastic left heart syndrome 6 mo–4.5 y 9 boys, 6 girls 28b 
Steele et al, 2006, Canada 29 members (8 families) N/A N/A Hospice and child hospital Observation and interviews N/A N/A N/A N/A 27b 
van Hooren et al, 2005, the Netherlands N = 55; 18 living with PWS, 23 parents, 14 HCP 100% N/A Center for clinical genetics and parent association In-depth qualitative interview N/A PWS 8–38 y N/A 28c 
Verberne et al, 2019, the Netherlands 24 mothers, 18 fathers 68.5% <30 = 5%; 30–40 = 73%; >40 = 23% Pediatric palliative care team Semistructured interview N/A All children generic LLCs 0–5 = 58%, 5–12 = 29%, 12–16 = 12% 50/50 girls/boys 28b 
Ware et al, 2007, United Kingdom 8 fathers N/A N/A Newspapers, support groups Semistructured interview N/A LLCs N/A N/A 30b 
Wood et al, 2001, United States 8 fathers N/A N/A Letter sent after wives’ participation Semistructured interview N/A LLCs 5 mo–16 y 3 boys, 4 girls 28b,c 
SourceSample SizeResponse RateAge (Fathers)Source of ParticipantsData CollectionTime of Data CollectionChild DiagnosisChild AgeChild GenderQuality Score
Aho et al, 2006, Finland 8 fathers N/A 29–49 (M = 35) N/A Survey and interview 2.5 mo–2.5 y postdeath Heart defect, cot death, kidney and congenital heart disease, severe handicap, premature birth All <3 y old N/A 27b,c 
Aho et al, 2009, Finland 8 fathers 80% 29–49 (M = 35) Online group for parents Survey and interview 2.5 mo–2 y postdeath 64% heart defect; other diagnoses: premature birth, congenital kidney disease, cot death, and severe handicap 40 min–2.3 y N/A 28c 
Alam et al, 2012, Canada 13 fathers, 18 mothers 69% M = 46.6 Pediatric hospital Semistructured interview 6,12, and 18 mo postchild death Leukemia and CNS tumors 8 mo–20.7 y N/A 30c 
Armentrout, 2009, United States N = 15; 4 couples, 7 mothers N/A 27–42 (M = 31.6) Online support group Narrative interviews 0.5–12 y postchild’s death LLCs 10 infants: 2–12 d; 2 infants: 1 1/2–2 mo N/A 26c 
Azeez et al, 2022, Australia 10 fathers 71% 31–42 (M = 35) N/A Semistructured interview 1–12 y postdeath N/A 30 min–27 d N/A 27c 
Bailey-Pearce et al, 2018, United Kingdom 7 fathers 35% 27–54 Local nursing team Narrative interview N/A N/A N/A N/A 27b 
Barrera et al, 2007, Canada 7 fathers, 13 mothers 71% 31.92–48.08 Pediatric hospital Semistructured interview 9–14 mo post child death Cancer, congenital heart disease, meningitis, drowning 9 d–17.83 y 9 girls, 6 boys 30c 
Barrera et al, 2009, Canada 8 mothers, 13 fathers 69% 32–65 (M = 46.6) E-mail 5 mo post child death Semistructured interview 6 mo post child death Leukemia, CNS tumors, Hurler’s disease, sarcomas, neuroblastomas, non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma 8 mo–20.7 y (M = 9.2 y) N/A 30c 
Beecham et al, 2017, United Kingdom 13 mothers, 2 fathers, 3 dyads 36% N/A Metropolitan specialist palliative care service Semistructured interview 6–10 mo post child death Neurology, gastroenterology, metabolic, chromosomal abnormality, oncology, immunology, respiratory 0–1 y = 2, 1–4 y = 2, 4–12 y = 6 12–17 y = 8 9 girls, 9 boys 30b 
Buzgova et al, 2015, Czech Republic 7 mothers, 1 father N/A 32–60 N/A Interview N/A 2 with cancer, others with noncancer diagnosis 1 mo–16 y 4 boys, 4 girls 24b 
Cadell et al, 2012, Canadaa 47 parents interviewed N/A M = 41.74 Academic and clinical sites Semistructured interview N/A LLCs 6 mo–20 y N/A 28c 
Caicedo et al, 2019, United States 70 mothers, 26 fathers 32% N/A Online obituary notices Open-ended interview 2, 4, 6, and13 mo post child death All children generic LLCs 37% teens, 37% infant, 21% school 5% preschool N/A 23c 
Cantwell-Bartl, 2018, Australia 16 mothers, 13 fathers N/A N/A Pediatric hospital Semistructured interviews N/A Hypoplastic left heart syndrome 14 mo–19 y N/A 24b 
Cook, 1988, United States 55 fathers 50% N/A Pediatric hospital (e-mail) Interview open-ended questionnaire 10 mo–5 y post child death Cancer N/A 60% boys, 40% girls 25b,c 
Davies et al, 2003, Wales 30 families N/A N/A Professional network In-depth interview N/A N/A N/A N/A 28b 
Davies et al, 2004, United States 8 fathers 53% 34–39 Pediatric hospice home care program Unstructured interview N/A Cancer, spinal muscular atrophy, Tay Sachs 3 mo–14 y 4 girls, 4boys 30b 
Dutta et al, 2020, Singapore 6 couples, 13 mothers, 4 fathers, 2 parental figures 80% M = 49.35 Hospice care, Children’s Cancer Foundation, Club Rainbow Semistructured interviews 1 mo–1 y post child death All children LLCs M = 12.06 y N/A 30c 
Fernández-Ávalos et al, 2020, Spain 5 fathers, 11 mothers N/A M = 65 M = 65 Semistructured interviews N/A 5, learning disability from birth; 11, leaning disability after birth 18 and 40 y (M = 32.3; SD = 6.96) N/A 26b 
Fortney et al, 2020, United States 30 mothers, 16 fathers 12.45% M = 38.86 NICU Interview 37.06–38.45 mo postdeath Congenital anomalies, cardiac and respiratory conditions M = 40.90 d 52% girls 30b 
Gilmer et al, 2012, Canada 36 mothers, 22 fathers, 39 siblings 68% M = 43.9 Oncology unit Semistructured interviews 6–19 mo post child death Cancer M = 12 y N/A 26c 
Heller et al, 2005, United States 23 mothers, 10 fathers, 3 relatives 26% N/A Pediatric teaching hospitals Open-ended interview Median 7–8 mo post child death All generic LLCs <12 mo 16 boys, 18 girls 25c 
Jordan et al, 2015, Ireland 16 mothers, 9 fathers N/A N/A Hospital and hospice Interviews 6–24 mo post child death LLCs 1–10 y: 1; 10–18y: 10 8 boys, 8 girls 29b,c 
Koch et al, 2021, United Statesa 61 parents N/A N/A Academic medical center Semistructured interviews 2008–2011. No further information. Premature infants, complex cardiac conditions; with/requiring bone marrow transplant N/A N/A 25b 
Lowton, 2009, United Kingdom N = 32 parents, 9 fathers 12% N/A Invitation by Cystic fibrosis Trust In-depth interview 1 y–6 y postdeath Cystic fibrosis 17–36 y N/A 27b 
Mendizabal-Espinosa et al, 2021, United Kingdom 2 fathers, 3 mothers N/A N/A Hospices In-depth interview N/A LLC diagnosed during pregnancy and at birth N/A N/A 25b 
Menezes, 2010, United Kingdom 11 children, 11 siblings, 10 mothers, 7 fathers 10 families took part; 2 declined N/A Association for children with LLCs Interview and participant observation N/A Different LLCs 2-6 y: 4; 7–11 y: 3; 12–18 y: 4 N/A 25b 
Mitchell et al, 2019, United Kingdom 6 fathers, 11 mothers 12% N/A PICU mortality database Semistructured interview M = 11.8 mo post child death Different LLCs 5 mo–3 y N/A 30b 
Moola et al, 2011, Canada N = 29 (sample was gender-balanced) N/A 35–55 N/A Semistructured interview N/A Cystic fibrosis, congenital heart disease 10–18 y N/A 29b 
Nicholas et al, 2009, Canada 16 fathers N/A 20–60 (M = 43) Pediatric hospital Semistructured interview N/A Cancer (leukemia or oncological disease) M = 1–17 y N/A 30b 
Nicholas et al, 2016, Canada 18 fathers N/A N/A HCP Semistructured interviews >3 mo postdeath (6 fathers) All children LLC 9–17 y N/A 29b 
Price et al, 2011, United Kingdom 16 mothers, 9 fathers 66% families N/A N/A Semistructured interviews 10–23 mo post child death Cancer and nonmalignant disorders 2 mo–1 y = 5, 1 y–5 y = 1, 12 y–15 y = 5, 16–20 y = 3 8 boys, 8 girls 29b 
Proulx et al, 2016, Canada 13 fathers 81% 32–58 PICU at a health center Semistructured interviews 2–7 y post child death Complex chronic condition or a sudden illness 1–16 y N/A 30c 
Raingruber et al, 2007, United States 4 mothers, 3 fathers 66% families 28–45 Through health professional Semistructured interview N/A All children generic LLCs Child 1 and 4 alive at interview; no age. Child 2–20 d; child 3–5 d N/A 25c 
Rempel et al, 2007, Canada 9 mothers, 7 fathers N/A 30–50 Tertiary referral center Unstructured interview N/A Hypoplastic left heart syndrome 2 mo–5 y 3 boys, 6 girls 26b 
Rempel et al, 2012, Canada 15 mothers, 10 fathers 15 out of 23 families 27–37 (M = 32) Nurse practitioner Open-ended interview N/A Hypoplastic left heart syndrome 6 mo–4.5 y 9 boys, 6 girls 28b 
Steele et al, 2006, Canada 29 members (8 families) N/A N/A Hospice and child hospital Observation and interviews N/A N/A N/A N/A 27b 
van Hooren et al, 2005, the Netherlands N = 55; 18 living with PWS, 23 parents, 14 HCP 100% N/A Center for clinical genetics and parent association In-depth qualitative interview N/A PWS 8–38 y N/A 28c 
Verberne et al, 2019, the Netherlands 24 mothers, 18 fathers 68.5% <30 = 5%; 30–40 = 73%; >40 = 23% Pediatric palliative care team Semistructured interview N/A All children generic LLCs 0–5 = 58%, 5–12 = 29%, 12–16 = 12% 50/50 girls/boys 28b 
Ware et al, 2007, United Kingdom 8 fathers N/A N/A Newspapers, support groups Semistructured interview N/A LLCs N/A N/A 30b 
Wood et al, 2001, United States 8 fathers N/A N/A Letter sent after wives’ participation Semistructured interview N/A LLCs 5 mo–16 y 3 boys, 4 girls 28b,c 

CNS, central nervous system; M, mean; N/A, not applicable; PWS, Prader-Willi syndrome.

a

Number of interviewed mothers and fathers not available.

b

Predeath loss.

c

Postdeath loss.

Studies all related to one another through contribution to a FATHER model encompassing 6 multifaceted overarching concepts: facing loss; ambivalence: mixed feelings; traumatic loss: posttraumatic stress; hard work of grief: fatigue; endurance and coping: loss-orientated versus restoration; and renewed sense of aliveness and purpose (Table 2). Naming the concepts mnemonically was an afterthought for presentation rather than an a priori coding system influencing the categories identified. Our model presents an overlap between the first 3 categories; this mirrors the clinical presentations and oscillations of grief symptoms (Fig 2). Characteristics of these categories can be comorbid at various grief points; for example, there are elements of trauma responses to receiving diagnosis1517  and postbereavement44,45 ; ambivalence occurs in the predeath grief46,47  and after a child’s death15  (Tables 3 and 4).

TABLE 2

Constructs of the model

Main ConceptDefinitionSubconceptConditions
Facing loss Grief that occurs before a loss; at the moment of receiving a terminal or life-limiting diagnosis 
  1. A sudden diagnosis: Bužgová (2015; prognosis and awareness); Davies et al (2003; “I thought it was absolutely appalling”); Mendizabal-Espinosa et al (2021; life-changing news); Raingruber et al (2007; searching for circles of meaning)

    • Distance-seeking: Rempel et al (2007; normalizing: “she’s been like the normal kid”); Wood et al (2001; role of father: “papa bear,” “ally on the frontier,” “seeking distance”)

    • Reenactment of past trauma: Cantwell-Bartl (2018; diagnosis in utero); Menezes (2010; the cycle of crisis and survival)

  2. Cognitive and affective processing:

    • Shock: Aho et al (2006; anticipatory feelings of grief); Bailey-Pearce et al (2018; experience of diagnosis); Davies et al (2004; battling uncertainty); Fernández-Ávalos et al (2020; experience and feelings of loss in response to the intellectual disability diagnosis); Ware et al (2007; life is no longer the same, the emotional impact); Wood et al (2001; disability and death: “a double loss”)

    • Ambiguous loss/denial: Aho et al (2006; anticipatory feelings of grief); Ware et al (2007; life is no longer the same)

    • Circles of hope: Aho et al (2006; anticipatory feelings of grief); Davies et al (2004; battling the dragon: an all-consuming life experience; battling uncertainty); Mendizabal-Espinosa et al (2021; what if?); Mitchell et al (2019; parents have significant knowledge and experiences that influence the decision-making process: “I may not have the practical skills that the nurse has, but my knowledge of my child and my child’s illness far surpasses that”); Nicholas et al (2009; emotional experiences); Verberne et al (2019; confrontation with loss and related grief)

    • Guilt: Koch et al (2021; role strain)

  3. Control/normality: Aho et al (2006; anticipatory feelings of grief); Fernández-Ávalos et al (2020; emotional bonds with the child); Jordan et al (2015; subjective uncertainty, disorder, and transformation); Lowton (2009; the social environment); Price et al (2011; piloting); Wood et al (2001; disability and death: a double loss)

    • Positivity versus uncertainty of death: Beecham et al (2017; periods in the illness and child’s condition when decisions were made); Davies et al (2004; battling uncertainty); Lowton (2009; the social environment); Mendizabal-Espinosa et al (2021; what if?); Menezes (2010; the child’s life and death); Mitchell et al (2019; parents have significant knowledge and experiences that influence the decision-making process: I may not have the practical skills that the nurse has, but my knowledge of my child and my child’s illness far surpasses that); Moola et al (2011; the family context: stress and complexity); Verberne et al (2019; daily anxiety of child loss); Wood et al (2001; active coping: “I just got right in and got to it”)

 
Haemato-oncological: 4; heart disease: 3; not specified: 3; other LLC’s: 10 
Ambivalence: Mixed feelings Mixed feelings relating to terminal diagnosis (eg, both relief and pain at death after period of care or loved one suffering: “Glad it’s over, but don’t want them to die”) 
  1. Predeath phase: Aho et al (2006; anticipatory feelings of grief); Fernández-Ávalos et al (2020; experience and feelings of loss in response to the intellectual disability diagnosis); Jordan et al (2015; subjective uncertainty, disorder and transformation); Lowton (2009; the psychological environment); Mendizabal-Espinosa et al (2021; what if); Proulx et al (2016; talking about the child and remembering her or him); Rempel et al (2012; phase 2: growing increasingly attached: “I actually held her”); Steele et al (2006; emotional impact); Verberne et al (2019; keeping thoughts about child’s death out at bay)

  2. After death: Aho et al (2006; emotional feeling); Aho et al (2009; negative support from the spouse and other children in the family); Fortney et al (2020; influence of perceived suffering); Proulx et al (2016; keeping the child present in everyday life; essence of the phenomenon: learning to live with a new reality); Rempel et al (2012; phase 2: growing increasingly attached: I actually held her); Wood et al (2001; healing: “I’ll never forget”; disability and death: a double loss)

 
Not specified: 2; heart disease: 4; other LLCs: 6 
Traumatic loss: Posttraumatic stress A loss that is experienced as traumatic by the person grieving, engendering the symptomology of posttraumatic stress 
  1. Anger/anxiety: Aho et al (2006; emotional feeling); Azeez et al (2022; coping with grief and subsequent feelings of anger); Barrera et al (2009; perceptions of the deceased child); Davies et al (2004; battling uncertainty); Gilmer et al (2012; personal changes); Nicholas, et al (2016; overwhelming presence of the illness); Wood et al (2001; fathers’ isolation: “select fraternity”; gender impact on marriage: “I didn’t grieve less, just differently”; disability and death: a double loss)

  2. Guilt: Aho et al (2006; emotional feeling); Caicedo et al (2019; spent more time with the child); Davies et al (2004; battling uncertainty); Gilmer et al (2012; personal changes); Wood et al (2001; disability and death: a double loss; active coping: I just got right in and got to it)

  3. Depression: Aho et al (2006; emotional feeling); Barrera et al (2009; self-identity); Nicholas et al (2009; emotional experiences, uncertainty leading to role confusion, keeping to oneself and independently carrying personal pain); Proulx et al (2016; needing to push forward to avoid breakdown); Steele et al (2006; emotional impact); Ware et al (2007; the emotional impact)

  4. Stress response/trauma: Aho et al (2006; physical reactions); Barrera et al (2007; characteristics of minimal expression of grief); Davies et al (2004; battling the dragon: an all-consuming life experience); Fernández-Ávalos et al (2020; recurrent grief); Mitchell et al (2019; families perceive benefits to receiving end of life care for their child in a PICU); Proulx et al (2016; relativizing everyday dramas); Ware et al (2007; diagnosis turns the world upside down)

  5. Isolation: Aho et al (2006; social and behavioral reactions); Alam et al (2012; relationship with spouse); Fernández-Ávalos et al (2020; recurrent grief); Nicholas, et al (2016; relational challenges); Ware et al (2007; the world is a lonelier place); Wood et al (2001; fathers’ isolation: select fraternity)

  6. Shock: Bailey-Pearce et al (2018; living with the illness)

  7. Ambiguous loss/denial: Aho et al (2006; emotional feeling); Alam et al (2012; grief expression); Barrera et al (2009; perceptions of the deceased child)

 
Haemato-oncological: 6; other LLCs: 8; not specified: 4 
Hard work of grief: Fatigue Feeling exhausted by the emotional effects of grief and the demands of everyday life while living with loss Aho et al (2006; changes in fathers’ lives occasioned by grief, anticipatory feelings of grief); Aho et al (2009; positive support from those close to the father and other people); Alam et al (2012; coping with grief and bereavement); Fernández-Ávalos et al (2020; coping strategies to face loss and grief); Gilmer et al (2012; changes in work); Nicholas, et al (2016; overwhelming presence of the illness, keeping to oneself and independently carrying personal pain); Steele et al (2006; emotional impact); Wood et al (2001; active coping: I just got right in and got to it) Heart disease: 2; haemato-oncological: 2; other LLCs: 1; not specified: 1 
Endurance and coping: Loss-orientated versus restoration Emotional, practical, and social responses to manage the effects of loss 
  1. Loss-orientated activity:

    • Adjusting to the changed relationship with the deceased: Armentrout (2009; remembering activities; family and friends); Barrera et al (2009; perceptions of the deceased child); Caicedo et al (2019; remembering and honoring the child); Proulx et al (2016; performing rituals; maintaining a relationship with the child); Wood et al (2001; active coping: I just got right in and got to it); Wood et al (2001; healing: I’ll never forget)

    • Stoicism: Cook (1988; thinking about something else); van Hooren et al (2005; interventions); Nicholas et al (2016; keeping to oneself and independently carrying personal pain); Raingruber et al (2007); Wood et al (2001; stability of identity and worldview: hunters and ministers; gender impact on marriage: I didn’t grieve less, just differently); Ware et al (2007; coping)

    • Support (positive and negative): Aho et al (2009; fathers’ support network after the death of a child; positive support from the spouse and other children in the family; positive support from those close to the father and other people; positive support from peers; positive support from professionals; negative support from those close to the father and other people; negative support from professionals; support received from professionals); Azeez et al (2022; disenfranchised grief: lack of social recognition and acknowledgment); Barrera et al (2009; social network); Heller et al (2005; being there through the child’s death and parents’ bereavement provides great comfort); Lowton (2009; organization and delivery of care); Mendizabal-Espinosa et al (2021; being together and being supported); Nicholas, et al (2016; support from one’s partner; relational challenges); Proulx et al (2016; feeling supported by their partner); Raingruber et al (2007; searching for circles of meaning); Wood et al (2001; fathers’ isolation: select fraternity)

    • Grief community: Barrera et al (2009; social network); Cadell et al (2012; growth alongside distress); Nicholas et al (2016; connecting with others); Wood et al (2001; healing: I’ll never forget)

  2. Restoration-orientated activity:

    • Keeping busy: Azeez et al (2022; coping with grief and subsequent feelings of anger); Barrera et al (2007; factors relating to integrated grief); Proulx et al (2016; keeping busy); Wood et al (2001; active coping: I just got right in and got to it)

    • Leisure activities: Armentrout (2009; initial shock; differences in grief between mothers and fathers); Barrera et al (2007; factors relating to integrated grief; coping with integrated grief); Barrera et al (2009; self in the context of worldview meaning making);

  3. Loss-orientated versus restoration-orientated tasks: Armentrout (2009: initial shock); Cantwell-Bartl (2018; diagnosis in utero; diagnosis after birth); Steele et al (2006; emotional impact)

 
Haemato-oncological: 2; heart disease: 4; other LLCs: 6; not specified: 2 
Renewed sense of aliveness and purpose A renewed sense of aliveness or meaning and purpose in life that emerges from grief 
  1. Finding new meaning in life after child’s death: Aho et al (2006; changes in fathers’ lives occasioned by grief); Armentrout (2009; altered perspectives of life); Barrera et al (2007; characteristics of integrated grief; factors relating to integrated grief); Barrera et al (2009; self in the context of worldview meaning making; surviving children); Cadell et al (2012; posttraumatic growth); Dutta et al (2020; acknowledging mortality); Jordan et al (2015; subjective uncertainty, disorder, and transformation); Nicholas et al (2016; changing priorities); Proulx et al (2016; finding motivation in their other children, developing a new sensitivity; finding meaning in their experience of grief, changing priorities); Ware et al (2007; the emotional impact); Wood et al (2001; healing: I’ll never forget; stability of identity and worldview: hunters and ministers; celebrating and normalizing the child)

  2. Religion/faith: Armentrout (2009; spiritual/religious perspectives); Cadell et al (2012; posttraumatic growth); Gilmer et al (2012; changes in spiritual beliefs); Nicholas et al (2016; spirituality); Nicholas et al (2009; uncertainty leading to role confusion)

 
Haemato-oncological: 5; heart disease: 3; other LLCs: 7 
Main ConceptDefinitionSubconceptConditions
Facing loss Grief that occurs before a loss; at the moment of receiving a terminal or life-limiting diagnosis 
  1. A sudden diagnosis: Bužgová (2015; prognosis and awareness); Davies et al (2003; “I thought it was absolutely appalling”); Mendizabal-Espinosa et al (2021; life-changing news); Raingruber et al (2007; searching for circles of meaning)

    • Distance-seeking: Rempel et al (2007; normalizing: “she’s been like the normal kid”); Wood et al (2001; role of father: “papa bear,” “ally on the frontier,” “seeking distance”)

    • Reenactment of past trauma: Cantwell-Bartl (2018; diagnosis in utero); Menezes (2010; the cycle of crisis and survival)

  2. Cognitive and affective processing:

    • Shock: Aho et al (2006; anticipatory feelings of grief); Bailey-Pearce et al (2018; experience of diagnosis); Davies et al (2004; battling uncertainty); Fernández-Ávalos et al (2020; experience and feelings of loss in response to the intellectual disability diagnosis); Ware et al (2007; life is no longer the same, the emotional impact); Wood et al (2001; disability and death: “a double loss”)

    • Ambiguous loss/denial: Aho et al (2006; anticipatory feelings of grief); Ware et al (2007; life is no longer the same)

    • Circles of hope: Aho et al (2006; anticipatory feelings of grief); Davies et al (2004; battling the dragon: an all-consuming life experience; battling uncertainty); Mendizabal-Espinosa et al (2021; what if?); Mitchell et al (2019; parents have significant knowledge and experiences that influence the decision-making process: “I may not have the practical skills that the nurse has, but my knowledge of my child and my child’s illness far surpasses that”); Nicholas et al (2009; emotional experiences); Verberne et al (2019; confrontation with loss and related grief)

    • Guilt: Koch et al (2021; role strain)

  3. Control/normality: Aho et al (2006; anticipatory feelings of grief); Fernández-Ávalos et al (2020; emotional bonds with the child); Jordan et al (2015; subjective uncertainty, disorder, and transformation); Lowton (2009; the social environment); Price et al (2011; piloting); Wood et al (2001; disability and death: a double loss)

    • Positivity versus uncertainty of death: Beecham et al (2017; periods in the illness and child’s condition when decisions were made); Davies et al (2004; battling uncertainty); Lowton (2009; the social environment); Mendizabal-Espinosa et al (2021; what if?); Menezes (2010; the child’s life and death); Mitchell et al (2019; parents have significant knowledge and experiences that influence the decision-making process: I may not have the practical skills that the nurse has, but my knowledge of my child and my child’s illness far surpasses that); Moola et al (2011; the family context: stress and complexity); Verberne et al (2019; daily anxiety of child loss); Wood et al (2001; active coping: “I just got right in and got to it”)

 
Haemato-oncological: 4; heart disease: 3; not specified: 3; other LLC’s: 10 
Ambivalence: Mixed feelings Mixed feelings relating to terminal diagnosis (eg, both relief and pain at death after period of care or loved one suffering: “Glad it’s over, but don’t want them to die”) 
  1. Predeath phase: Aho et al (2006; anticipatory feelings of grief); Fernández-Ávalos et al (2020; experience and feelings of loss in response to the intellectual disability diagnosis); Jordan et al (2015; subjective uncertainty, disorder and transformation); Lowton (2009; the psychological environment); Mendizabal-Espinosa et al (2021; what if); Proulx et al (2016; talking about the child and remembering her or him); Rempel et al (2012; phase 2: growing increasingly attached: “I actually held her”); Steele et al (2006; emotional impact); Verberne et al (2019; keeping thoughts about child’s death out at bay)

  2. After death: Aho et al (2006; emotional feeling); Aho et al (2009; negative support from the spouse and other children in the family); Fortney et al (2020; influence of perceived suffering); Proulx et al (2016; keeping the child present in everyday life; essence of the phenomenon: learning to live with a new reality); Rempel et al (2012; phase 2: growing increasingly attached: I actually held her); Wood et al (2001; healing: “I’ll never forget”; disability and death: a double loss)

 
Not specified: 2; heart disease: 4; other LLCs: 6 
Traumatic loss: Posttraumatic stress A loss that is experienced as traumatic by the person grieving, engendering the symptomology of posttraumatic stress 
  1. Anger/anxiety: Aho et al (2006; emotional feeling); Azeez et al (2022; coping with grief and subsequent feelings of anger); Barrera et al (2009; perceptions of the deceased child); Davies et al (2004; battling uncertainty); Gilmer et al (2012; personal changes); Nicholas, et al (2016; overwhelming presence of the illness); Wood et al (2001; fathers’ isolation: “select fraternity”; gender impact on marriage: “I didn’t grieve less, just differently”; disability and death: a double loss)

  2. Guilt: Aho et al (2006; emotional feeling); Caicedo et al (2019; spent more time with the child); Davies et al (2004; battling uncertainty); Gilmer et al (2012; personal changes); Wood et al (2001; disability and death: a double loss; active coping: I just got right in and got to it)

  3. Depression: Aho et al (2006; emotional feeling); Barrera et al (2009; self-identity); Nicholas et al (2009; emotional experiences, uncertainty leading to role confusion, keeping to oneself and independently carrying personal pain); Proulx et al (2016; needing to push forward to avoid breakdown); Steele et al (2006; emotional impact); Ware et al (2007; the emotional impact)

  4. Stress response/trauma: Aho et al (2006; physical reactions); Barrera et al (2007; characteristics of minimal expression of grief); Davies et al (2004; battling the dragon: an all-consuming life experience); Fernández-Ávalos et al (2020; recurrent grief); Mitchell et al (2019; families perceive benefits to receiving end of life care for their child in a PICU); Proulx et al (2016; relativizing everyday dramas); Ware et al (2007; diagnosis turns the world upside down)

  5. Isolation: Aho et al (2006; social and behavioral reactions); Alam et al (2012; relationship with spouse); Fernández-Ávalos et al (2020; recurrent grief); Nicholas, et al (2016; relational challenges); Ware et al (2007; the world is a lonelier place); Wood et al (2001; fathers’ isolation: select fraternity)

  6. Shock: Bailey-Pearce et al (2018; living with the illness)

  7. Ambiguous loss/denial: Aho et al (2006; emotional feeling); Alam et al (2012; grief expression); Barrera et al (2009; perceptions of the deceased child)

 
Haemato-oncological: 6; other LLCs: 8; not specified: 4 
Hard work of grief: Fatigue Feeling exhausted by the emotional effects of grief and the demands of everyday life while living with loss Aho et al (2006; changes in fathers’ lives occasioned by grief, anticipatory feelings of grief); Aho et al (2009; positive support from those close to the father and other people); Alam et al (2012; coping with grief and bereavement); Fernández-Ávalos et al (2020; coping strategies to face loss and grief); Gilmer et al (2012; changes in work); Nicholas, et al (2016; overwhelming presence of the illness, keeping to oneself and independently carrying personal pain); Steele et al (2006; emotional impact); Wood et al (2001; active coping: I just got right in and got to it) Heart disease: 2; haemato-oncological: 2; other LLCs: 1; not specified: 1 
Endurance and coping: Loss-orientated versus restoration Emotional, practical, and social responses to manage the effects of loss 
  1. Loss-orientated activity:

    • Adjusting to the changed relationship with the deceased: Armentrout (2009; remembering activities; family and friends); Barrera et al (2009; perceptions of the deceased child); Caicedo et al (2019; remembering and honoring the child); Proulx et al (2016; performing rituals; maintaining a relationship with the child); Wood et al (2001; active coping: I just got right in and got to it); Wood et al (2001; healing: I’ll never forget)

    • Stoicism: Cook (1988; thinking about something else); van Hooren et al (2005; interventions); Nicholas et al (2016; keeping to oneself and independently carrying personal pain); Raingruber et al (2007); Wood et al (2001; stability of identity and worldview: hunters and ministers; gender impact on marriage: I didn’t grieve less, just differently); Ware et al (2007; coping)

    • Support (positive and negative): Aho et al (2009; fathers’ support network after the death of a child; positive support from the spouse and other children in the family; positive support from those close to the father and other people; positive support from peers; positive support from professionals; negative support from those close to the father and other people; negative support from professionals; support received from professionals); Azeez et al (2022; disenfranchised grief: lack of social recognition and acknowledgment); Barrera et al (2009; social network); Heller et al (2005; being there through the child’s death and parents’ bereavement provides great comfort); Lowton (2009; organization and delivery of care); Mendizabal-Espinosa et al (2021; being together and being supported); Nicholas, et al (2016; support from one’s partner; relational challenges); Proulx et al (2016; feeling supported by their partner); Raingruber et al (2007; searching for circles of meaning); Wood et al (2001; fathers’ isolation: select fraternity)

    • Grief community: Barrera et al (2009; social network); Cadell et al (2012; growth alongside distress); Nicholas et al (2016; connecting with others); Wood et al (2001; healing: I’ll never forget)

  2. Restoration-orientated activity:

    • Keeping busy: Azeez et al (2022; coping with grief and subsequent feelings of anger); Barrera et al (2007; factors relating to integrated grief); Proulx et al (2016; keeping busy); Wood et al (2001; active coping: I just got right in and got to it)

    • Leisure activities: Armentrout (2009; initial shock; differences in grief between mothers and fathers); Barrera et al (2007; factors relating to integrated grief; coping with integrated grief); Barrera et al (2009; self in the context of worldview meaning making);

  3. Loss-orientated versus restoration-orientated tasks: Armentrout (2009: initial shock); Cantwell-Bartl (2018; diagnosis in utero; diagnosis after birth); Steele et al (2006; emotional impact)

 
Haemato-oncological: 2; heart disease: 4; other LLCs: 6; not specified: 2 
Renewed sense of aliveness and purpose A renewed sense of aliveness or meaning and purpose in life that emerges from grief 
  1. Finding new meaning in life after child’s death: Aho et al (2006; changes in fathers’ lives occasioned by grief); Armentrout (2009; altered perspectives of life); Barrera et al (2007; characteristics of integrated grief; factors relating to integrated grief); Barrera et al (2009; self in the context of worldview meaning making; surviving children); Cadell et al (2012; posttraumatic growth); Dutta et al (2020; acknowledging mortality); Jordan et al (2015; subjective uncertainty, disorder, and transformation); Nicholas et al (2016; changing priorities); Proulx et al (2016; finding motivation in their other children, developing a new sensitivity; finding meaning in their experience of grief, changing priorities); Ware et al (2007; the emotional impact); Wood et al (2001; healing: I’ll never forget; stability of identity and worldview: hunters and ministers; celebrating and normalizing the child)

  2. Religion/faith: Armentrout (2009; spiritual/religious perspectives); Cadell et al (2012; posttraumatic growth); Gilmer et al (2012; changes in spiritual beliefs); Nicholas et al (2016; spirituality); Nicholas et al (2009; uncertainty leading to role confusion)

 
Haemato-oncological: 5; heart disease: 3; other LLCs: 7 
FIGURE 2

Conceptual model of the experience of loss and grief. Presentation of conceptual model, encompassing the distinct and overlapping features of the fathers’ predeath and postdeath experiences of loss and grief. The overlap between the first 3 categories mirrors the clinical presentations and oscillations of grief symptoms.

FIGURE 2

Conceptual model of the experience of loss and grief. Presentation of conceptual model, encompassing the distinct and overlapping features of the fathers’ predeath and postdeath experiences of loss and grief. The overlap between the first 3 categories mirrors the clinical presentations and oscillations of grief symptoms.

Close modal
TABLE 3

Similar Constructs in the Predeath and Postdeath Cycles

ThemePredeathPostdeath
Ambivalence: Mixed feelings Aho et al (2006): Experience of gratitude, joy, and relief in fathers’ sorrow when the child’s pain and suffering were over; because of child’s pain and suffering, fathers even hoped for the child’s death.
Fortney et al (2020): Struggle between loss and ending infant suffering
Rempel et al (2012): Contradictory realities, now and no longer; “We didn’t have a child because they took her away”; “She’s so close and yet so far away”
Jordan et al (2015): Waiting for death to occur as a fundamental aspect of parents’ experiences of “living in limbo”
Mendizabal-Espinosa et al (2021): Simultaneous planning for life and death; any excitement and hope were tinged with sadness, anxiety, and continued uncertainty. 
Aho et al (2009): Loss of the shared time (with the deceased child) and a time lived through the presence of the healthy siblings
Proulx et al (2016): Reintegrating conflicting realities: Pulling forward into the future and pulling the past into the present; relief that their child’s suffering had ended, even though they missed the child intensely (this belief was comforting for all fathers, including the ones who said they could not accept the death). 
Hard work of grief: Fatigue Aho et al (2006): Loss of control and overload; exhausting practical and emotional tasks of caring and loss
Steele et al (2006): Overload; unable to concentrate on anything else because of time and energy thinking about their child
Wood et al (2001): “Being pretty much overwhelmed by the whole thing ... my mom and dad came over to help me feed him. I just couldn’t do it. I remember, I was in tears and I don’t know why; maybe from the standpoint of overwhelmedness.” 
Aho et al (2006): Overload/exhaustion from dealing with loss; grief not resolved
Nicholas et al (2016): Grief not resolved, just accommodated; requiring medical leave from employment because of depression
Alam et al (2012): Grief not resolved, just accommodated; when fathers experienced emotional pain, over half of them reported to try to avoid it and to refocus on something else. 
Anxiety/anger Verberne et al (2019): Daily anxiety of child loss
Davies et al (2004): Externalizing inner conflict: “I truly wanted to go and remove myself from the situation (…) Forget about my 2-y-old, who still wants to call me Dad and wants to find out what’s going on with [ill sister] when I come home. Forget about my wife, who needed someone to lean on, someone’s shoulder to cry on.”
Nicholas et al (2016): Overwhelming presence of the illness; child’s illness consumed fathers’ thoughts and emotions. 
Aho et al (2006): Feelings of sorrow after child’s death; difficulty to find meaning: despair, trauma/stress, fight/flight response, and anger
Gilmer et al (2012): “I am very angry. Irritable with people outside the family, don’t give a s*** about people out there.”
Wood et al (2001): Anxious projection of future; expressed difficulty with the idea of having more children because “maybe there’s feelings so buried that I would be afraid to rekindle the pain of that much love.” 
Shock/stress (as trauma response) Aho et al (2006): Contradictory anticipatory feelings of grief similar to feelings of grief after child’s death. Expected loss was not easier, nor prepared fathers in the grief process; it prolonged the period of distress and activated trauma response.
Bailey-Pearce et al (2018): Devastating impact of diagnosis; a shock leaving fathers feeling uncertain about the future
Cantwell-Bartl (2018): Fathers combined responses of loss, stress, trauma, and restoration as they attempted to stay focused, support their infant and make family arrangements. A pool of grief manifested, and they recalled previous losses.
Davies et al (2004): A shocking diagnosis leaving fathers feeling uncertain about the future and not knowing what to do (derealization and dissociation in trauma)
Ware et al (2007): Devastating diagnosis altered fathers’ world irrevocably
Wood et al (2001): Experiencing a double loss: A “big blow psychologically” at diagnosis; metaphorical death of the expected healthy child. The child’s death was a second blow, although expected: “There was always the possibility that it could end by walking out of the hospital with an empty car seat (the empty seat as a prelude to the loss).” 
Aho et al (2006): Physical reactions, sleep disturbance, nightmares, actively inducing pain and feelings of agony during the period after the child’s death
Barrera et al (2007): Difficulties expressing emotional pain associated with child’s loss; unprocessed feelings of grief (eg, avoiding, inhibiting, minimizing the expression of grief and a restricted range of affect). Fathers appeared to try to carry on with life as if nothing had changed.
Mitchell et al (2019): Shocking and traumatic end-of-life events were described (eg, when they witnessed resuscitation as their child’s terminal event)
Proulx et al (2016): Going through the death of the child was heartbreaking and tragic. 
Isolation Nicholas et al (2016): Fewer social outlets beyond the immediate family because of the gravity, intensity, and/or precariousness of the child’s condition and care needs. Aho et al (2006): After child’s loss, conscious withdrawal from human relations; also experienced unwilling isolation (grief as something to be done privately; expectation of emotional stoicism in men)
Alam et al (2012): “Our relationship is... changing slightly in that there’s so much that we can’t share ... Some people have healing hands... my hands hurt people ...so I can’t touch her... especially in her condition, I further don’t want to touch her.” 
Ambiguous loss (includes denial/paradox of living) Aho et al (2006): Denial and accompanying disbelief about the child’s illness despite the information from the caregiving personnel regarding the child’s short life expectancy
Ware et al (2007): The paradox of losing the child when no immediate treatment was needed or possible, or when the child appeared to be no different to others
Comment: Loss remains unclear, unresolved, and difficult to make sense of (eg, child still alive but aspect of self/personality/life lost or changed by illness). 
Aho et al (2006): Defense mechanisms reported for a long time if child’s death had been sudden, which fathers found difficult to understand. The sense of unreality was reported in grief and trauma.
Barrera et al (2009): Fathers focused, unrealistically, on searching for the child, as if the child did not die, and withheld feelings of grief as if to avoid thinking that the child had died.
Aho et al (2009): Lacking emotional support from staff; perceptions of the inability of the personnel to face the grieving parents, avoiding the fathers, downplaying their grief, artificial empathy (this may reflect the heath workers’ grief; possibility of compassion fatigue) 
Guilt Koch et al (2021): Feeling at fault as a caregiver, revealing strain in health caregiving role, as well as guilt and strain in role as a parent Aho et al (2006): Anger, bitterness, and guilt as a natural part of the grief experienced; these persisted for a long time. These feelings were directed at themselves, God, and the caregiving personnel. (There seems to be a parallel process or projection in these accounts, feeling like inadequate caregivers and finding the fault with health care workers. Not to say that health care workers may not be at fault ever; just an observation of these themes running parallel.)
Davies et al (2004): “Some fathers were motivated to find someone or something to blame, but most realized their search was futile.” 
ThemePredeathPostdeath
Ambivalence: Mixed feelings Aho et al (2006): Experience of gratitude, joy, and relief in fathers’ sorrow when the child’s pain and suffering were over; because of child’s pain and suffering, fathers even hoped for the child’s death.
Fortney et al (2020): Struggle between loss and ending infant suffering
Rempel et al (2012): Contradictory realities, now and no longer; “We didn’t have a child because they took her away”; “She’s so close and yet so far away”
Jordan et al (2015): Waiting for death to occur as a fundamental aspect of parents’ experiences of “living in limbo”
Mendizabal-Espinosa et al (2021): Simultaneous planning for life and death; any excitement and hope were tinged with sadness, anxiety, and continued uncertainty. 
Aho et al (2009): Loss of the shared time (with the deceased child) and a time lived through the presence of the healthy siblings
Proulx et al (2016): Reintegrating conflicting realities: Pulling forward into the future and pulling the past into the present; relief that their child’s suffering had ended, even though they missed the child intensely (this belief was comforting for all fathers, including the ones who said they could not accept the death). 
Hard work of grief: Fatigue Aho et al (2006): Loss of control and overload; exhausting practical and emotional tasks of caring and loss
Steele et al (2006): Overload; unable to concentrate on anything else because of time and energy thinking about their child
Wood et al (2001): “Being pretty much overwhelmed by the whole thing ... my mom and dad came over to help me feed him. I just couldn’t do it. I remember, I was in tears and I don’t know why; maybe from the standpoint of overwhelmedness.” 
Aho et al (2006): Overload/exhaustion from dealing with loss; grief not resolved
Nicholas et al (2016): Grief not resolved, just accommodated; requiring medical leave from employment because of depression
Alam et al (2012): Grief not resolved, just accommodated; when fathers experienced emotional pain, over half of them reported to try to avoid it and to refocus on something else. 
Anxiety/anger Verberne et al (2019): Daily anxiety of child loss
Davies et al (2004): Externalizing inner conflict: “I truly wanted to go and remove myself from the situation (…) Forget about my 2-y-old, who still wants to call me Dad and wants to find out what’s going on with [ill sister] when I come home. Forget about my wife, who needed someone to lean on, someone’s shoulder to cry on.”
Nicholas et al (2016): Overwhelming presence of the illness; child’s illness consumed fathers’ thoughts and emotions. 
Aho et al (2006): Feelings of sorrow after child’s death; difficulty to find meaning: despair, trauma/stress, fight/flight response, and anger
Gilmer et al (2012): “I am very angry. Irritable with people outside the family, don’t give a s*** about people out there.”
Wood et al (2001): Anxious projection of future; expressed difficulty with the idea of having more children because “maybe there’s feelings so buried that I would be afraid to rekindle the pain of that much love.” 
Shock/stress (as trauma response) Aho et al (2006): Contradictory anticipatory feelings of grief similar to feelings of grief after child’s death. Expected loss was not easier, nor prepared fathers in the grief process; it prolonged the period of distress and activated trauma response.
Bailey-Pearce et al (2018): Devastating impact of diagnosis; a shock leaving fathers feeling uncertain about the future
Cantwell-Bartl (2018): Fathers combined responses of loss, stress, trauma, and restoration as they attempted to stay focused, support their infant and make family arrangements. A pool of grief manifested, and they recalled previous losses.
Davies et al (2004): A shocking diagnosis leaving fathers feeling uncertain about the future and not knowing what to do (derealization and dissociation in trauma)
Ware et al (2007): Devastating diagnosis altered fathers’ world irrevocably
Wood et al (2001): Experiencing a double loss: A “big blow psychologically” at diagnosis; metaphorical death of the expected healthy child. The child’s death was a second blow, although expected: “There was always the possibility that it could end by walking out of the hospital with an empty car seat (the empty seat as a prelude to the loss).” 
Aho et al (2006): Physical reactions, sleep disturbance, nightmares, actively inducing pain and feelings of agony during the period after the child’s death
Barrera et al (2007): Difficulties expressing emotional pain associated with child’s loss; unprocessed feelings of grief (eg, avoiding, inhibiting, minimizing the expression of grief and a restricted range of affect). Fathers appeared to try to carry on with life as if nothing had changed.
Mitchell et al (2019): Shocking and traumatic end-of-life events were described (eg, when they witnessed resuscitation as their child’s terminal event)
Proulx et al (2016): Going through the death of the child was heartbreaking and tragic. 
Isolation Nicholas et al (2016): Fewer social outlets beyond the immediate family because of the gravity, intensity, and/or precariousness of the child’s condition and care needs. Aho et al (2006): After child’s loss, conscious withdrawal from human relations; also experienced unwilling isolation (grief as something to be done privately; expectation of emotional stoicism in men)
Alam et al (2012): “Our relationship is... changing slightly in that there’s so much that we can’t share ... Some people have healing hands... my hands hurt people ...so I can’t touch her... especially in her condition, I further don’t want to touch her.” 
Ambiguous loss (includes denial/paradox of living) Aho et al (2006): Denial and accompanying disbelief about the child’s illness despite the information from the caregiving personnel regarding the child’s short life expectancy
Ware et al (2007): The paradox of losing the child when no immediate treatment was needed or possible, or when the child appeared to be no different to others
Comment: Loss remains unclear, unresolved, and difficult to make sense of (eg, child still alive but aspect of self/personality/life lost or changed by illness). 
Aho et al (2006): Defense mechanisms reported for a long time if child’s death had been sudden, which fathers found difficult to understand. The sense of unreality was reported in grief and trauma.
Barrera et al (2009): Fathers focused, unrealistically, on searching for the child, as if the child did not die, and withheld feelings of grief as if to avoid thinking that the child had died.
Aho et al (2009): Lacking emotional support from staff; perceptions of the inability of the personnel to face the grieving parents, avoiding the fathers, downplaying their grief, artificial empathy (this may reflect the heath workers’ grief; possibility of compassion fatigue) 
Guilt Koch et al (2021): Feeling at fault as a caregiver, revealing strain in health caregiving role, as well as guilt and strain in role as a parent Aho et al (2006): Anger, bitterness, and guilt as a natural part of the grief experienced; these persisted for a long time. These feelings were directed at themselves, God, and the caregiving personnel. (There seems to be a parallel process or projection in these accounts, feeling like inadequate caregivers and finding the fault with health care workers. Not to say that health care workers may not be at fault ever; just an observation of these themes running parallel.)
Davies et al (2004): “Some fathers were motivated to find someone or something to blame, but most realized their search was futile.” 
TABLE 4

Distinct Constructs in the Predeath and Postdeath Cycles

ThemeStudiesComments
Predeath Distance-seeking Rempel et al (2007): Viewing child’s life as normal helped parents to ward off worry, although parents knew that their child’s life was different from the lives of other children.
Wood et al (2001): Distancing from the infants to alleviate the pain may have served as a kind of anticipatory grieving. If the father didn’t get too attached, the impending early death may hurt less. 
  • Psychological distancing from the child/illness to minimize father’s pain

 
 Circles of hope Aho et al (2006): Hope and despair alternated in the fathers’ feelings according to the improvement or deterioration in the child’s state of health. Clinging to hope helped the fathers to bear up during the child’s illness, even if the child’s chances of survival were limited.
Davies et al (2004): Hope was part of fathers’ lives as they sought treatment to prolong time they could have with their children and to alleviate their suffering. Treatment implied hope for a cure, even when told that the prognosis might not be good.
Mendizabal-Espinosa et al (2021): “… even then [on our way to hospice], there was still a glimmer of hope that, if he would breathe on his own and he got through a couple of mo, he may be able to come back in [to hospital] for something more.”
Nicholas et al (2009): Hopelessness was expressed as they anticipated the child’s death. 
  • Complex relationship with hope during serious/terminal illness; it can be an emotional rollercoaster.

  • Complicated relationship with hope; coming to terms with inevitability of loss

  • Treatment as bargaining

 
 Control/ normality Aho et al (2006): Fathers felt they had momentarily lost control over their own lives and felt great mental weariness.
Beecham et al (2017): “We’re committing to a document that could be… and it was sort of 8 mo before she had died.”
Jordan et al (2015): Experience of an increasingly pronounced dislocation between 2 worlds; the new world which revolved around the (caring) requirements of the child and fathers’ old world that did not.
Price et al (2011): “Beginning at the first signs of illness, and established on confirmation of their child’s diagnosis/acknowledgment that their child could/would die, a sense of profound disruption and uncertainty is introduced into family life. All of a sudden, things were turned upside down.”
Wood et al (2001): “All those new things that are new and fresh and exciting to a kid, things they share with their fathers ...that I will never share with my son. That was harder than burying him in some respects ... But that loss occurred almost the first day after we got the finding. ... I lost that particular future with my son at that point.”
Verberne et al (2019): “A parent should not outlive their child. And that is happening right now (…) I do not have a healthy child, but I want to feel that I can respect myself for having done my best.” 
  • Contraction of self, loss of control

  • Loss of the shared world; “giving up” to the child

  • Loss of sense of control and predictability of safe and stable world

  • Loss of the shared world

  • Not wanting to have regrets. How to be a good parent to dying child; ritual and some sense of control

 
Postdeath Depression Aho et al (2006): “Constant self-blame, bitterness, and anger at the child’s death gave rise to a self-sustaining vicious circle and caused the fathers to become depressed.”
Barrera et al (2009): These parents often felt like failed parents; shut themselves off from emotionally reconnecting with surviving children, partners, and others.
Nicholas et al (2009): Fathers described feeling lost, “confused,” and “less of a father.” Although they sought to maintain a hopeful equilibrium, most described periodic emotional breakdowns and/or lingering depression. Proulx et al (2016): Fathers described an experience of profound suffering after the death of their child; some revealed having suicidal ideations. 
  • Links to existential angst often experienced when bereavement brings one into contact with sense of own and others’ mortality and subsequent loss of meaning and purpose

  • Loss of future perspective

  • Loss of identity

  • Existential angst

 
ThemeStudiesComments
Predeath Distance-seeking Rempel et al (2007): Viewing child’s life as normal helped parents to ward off worry, although parents knew that their child’s life was different from the lives of other children.
Wood et al (2001): Distancing from the infants to alleviate the pain may have served as a kind of anticipatory grieving. If the father didn’t get too attached, the impending early death may hurt less. 
  • Psychological distancing from the child/illness to minimize father’s pain

 
 Circles of hope Aho et al (2006): Hope and despair alternated in the fathers’ feelings according to the improvement or deterioration in the child’s state of health. Clinging to hope helped the fathers to bear up during the child’s illness, even if the child’s chances of survival were limited.
Davies et al (2004): Hope was part of fathers’ lives as they sought treatment to prolong time they could have with their children and to alleviate their suffering. Treatment implied hope for a cure, even when told that the prognosis might not be good.
Mendizabal-Espinosa et al (2021): “… even then [on our way to hospice], there was still a glimmer of hope that, if he would breathe on his own and he got through a couple of mo, he may be able to come back in [to hospital] for something more.”
Nicholas et al (2009): Hopelessness was expressed as they anticipated the child’s death. 
  • Complex relationship with hope during serious/terminal illness; it can be an emotional rollercoaster.

  • Complicated relationship with hope; coming to terms with inevitability of loss

  • Treatment as bargaining

 
 Control/ normality Aho et al (2006): Fathers felt they had momentarily lost control over their own lives and felt great mental weariness.
Beecham et al (2017): “We’re committing to a document that could be… and it was sort of 8 mo before she had died.”
Jordan et al (2015): Experience of an increasingly pronounced dislocation between 2 worlds; the new world which revolved around the (caring) requirements of the child and fathers’ old world that did not.
Price et al (2011): “Beginning at the first signs of illness, and established on confirmation of their child’s diagnosis/acknowledgment that their child could/would die, a sense of profound disruption and uncertainty is introduced into family life. All of a sudden, things were turned upside down.”
Wood et al (2001): “All those new things that are new and fresh and exciting to a kid, things they share with their fathers ...that I will never share with my son. That was harder than burying him in some respects ... But that loss occurred almost the first day after we got the finding. ... I lost that particular future with my son at that point.”
Verberne et al (2019): “A parent should not outlive their child. And that is happening right now (…) I do not have a healthy child, but I want to feel that I can respect myself for having done my best.” 
  • Contraction of self, loss of control

  • Loss of the shared world; “giving up” to the child

  • Loss of sense of control and predictability of safe and stable world

  • Loss of the shared world

  • Not wanting to have regrets. How to be a good parent to dying child; ritual and some sense of control

 
Postdeath Depression Aho et al (2006): “Constant self-blame, bitterness, and anger at the child’s death gave rise to a self-sustaining vicious circle and caused the fathers to become depressed.”
Barrera et al (2009): These parents often felt like failed parents; shut themselves off from emotionally reconnecting with surviving children, partners, and others.
Nicholas et al (2009): Fathers described feeling lost, “confused,” and “less of a father.” Although they sought to maintain a hopeful equilibrium, most described periodic emotional breakdowns and/or lingering depression. Proulx et al (2016): Fathers described an experience of profound suffering after the death of their child; some revealed having suicidal ideations. 
  • Links to existential angst often experienced when bereavement brings one into contact with sense of own and others’ mortality and subsequent loss of meaning and purpose

  • Loss of future perspective

  • Loss of identity

  • Existential angst

 

Predeath grief begins at the moment of receiving a life-limiting/terminal diagnosis. It has been previously defined as a “prelude” to grief46  and the “beginning of the end.”46  This grief foreshadowed bereavement or loss of the child’s health, because fathers experienced the “double loss”15  of living with the illness or disability in the present, alongside a sense of a limited or lost future of the life they envisaged for the child. They struggled to assimilate the shock of a sudden life-changing diagnosis.15,20,47,48 

For some, the child’s diagnosis restimulated feelings associated with past trauma related to previous experience of receiving news of an LLC diagnosis for a family member, such as a parent.49  There was a further struggle to process overwhelming news surrounding prognosis and awareness of what to expect from the illness.15,47  Fathers felt catapulted into living a perpetual crisis giving rise to stress and anxiety.1820  Exposure to grief feelings and anticipation of the child’s death during diagnosis period were not felt to reduce symptoms at the time of bereavement; this only prolonged the period of grief and distress.44  Some identified that coping with the anticipatory feelings prepared them in some way for postbereavement grief15 ; for others, this experience inhibited feelings of grief after the child’s death and had a negative impact on coping.44 

The model in this paper describes coming to terms with a life-limiting diagnosis while processing the reduced lifespan of the child. There were periods of emotional flooding, being overwhelmed, and feelings of helplessness where intensive cognitive and affective processing occurred, as fathers came to terms with the new reality cognitively and connected with grief feelings.17,18  Fathers tended to circle between hope16  and hopelessness.34,44  During this period, some fathers adapted through distancing from the child to minimize the pain of the anticipated death,15,50  while maintaining hope44  and focusing on practical care tasks.51  These responses enabled functioning during this period by managing affective processing and dosage of grief.

There was a sense of battle,38  or a need to fight the terminal illness and the physical decline in the child’s health, experienced by fathers as extremely distressing to witness,6,52  along with the resulting feelings of hopelessness and uncertainty.16,51,53  Treatment presented a form of bargaining, which fathers focused on to maintain hope, prolong the child’s life, and ward off the inevitability of death.16,18,45,54  Involvement in decisions surrounding care helped them counter a lack of control52  that felt overwhelming,45  whereas routine activities with the child and memories restored a sense of normality during the difficult transition through illness and bereavement.54,55 

Fathers experienced ambivalent feelings of loss56  and a sense of isolation after diagnosis.15,17,57  They described mixed feelings of wanting to hold onto the child and needing to let go.14,58  They felt isolated mainly when the child appeared healthy: “People couldn’t understand how we had a perfectly healthy 3-year-old running around and we were just beside ourselves.”17 

Some fathers described relief in relation to the child’s death and invoked the demands of caregiving, not wanting the child to suffer, and wanting it to be over.58  Others described feeling “thankful” after bereavement even though it felt “really awful that somebody is thankful when a child dies.”44  They experienced guilt44  surrounding ambivalent feelings and wondered if they could have done anything more for the child and/or spent more time with them while they were alive.32,71  There was an ambivalence of living, between wanting to stay connected to the child and the need to move on and live in the present.14  It was difficult to integrate the conflicting realities of the past and present that impacted negatively on relationships with their spouses and remaining children: “You never get over the death of your own child. It is always in your mind because the dead child reminds you of his/her existence every time you look at your other children.”39 

Traumatic loss often refers to a response to a bereavement that is distressing, unanticipated, frightening, sudden, violent, or perceived as unjust. However, it can describe any loss that engenders the symptomology of posttraumatic stress in those affected. Traumatic responses to the unexpected illness and early death of the child included shock,23  anger and anxiety,14,16,32,3436,45,51  stress,13,3235,44,57  guilt,26,32,34,43,45,46  depression,13,25,33,44,60,61  ambivalence,36,44,62  feelings of helplessness and isolation, and a deterioration in fathers’ mental health.15,17,35,44,61  Fathers reported physical responses including shaking, migraines, tiredness, a sense of physical pain, sleep disturbance, and nightmares.46  Aspects of the child’s treatment were experienced as traumatic, as well as the eventual death.28,45,63  Metaphors used likened the experience to a sense of having undergone a physical trauma such as feeling “scarred” like “burn victims” or “reduced to ashes.”16  Some experienced a sense of unreality and derealization associated with trauma and anxiety: “You’ve been taken out of your life and put into somebody else’s movie …the wrong movie … it’s that disorienting. It’s a very alienating experience.”16 

Diagnosis engendered feelings that the world was unstable and dangerous, disrupting their pretrauma assumptions of a safe and stable future.17  Feelings of underlying stress and anxiety persisted after bereavement.17,44  Fathers experienced extreme anguish, alongside periods of reduced emotional processing and numbing; this resembled the intrusion and avoidance of overwhelming feelings associated with posttraumatic stress.14,35,44,45,64 

Anxiety arose from the sense of the child’s existential fragility and living with illness.6,61  There was great anxiety surrounding the possibility that hospital visits could end with “walking out of the hospital with an empty car seat.”15  Having more children restimulated difficult emotions.15  Receiving news of diagnosis and death15,16,35,44,65  generated shock and anger. Fathers tended to express rather than work through emotions, in contrast to mothers.15  Subsequently, anger manifested as irritability in everyday life, contributing to difficulties in relationships and feelings of isolation from friends and family.41,52,57  They felt anger at the unfairness of the loss and at their inability to fulfill their protective role, a responsibility that necessarily had to be entrusted to health care workers and which caused a sense of powerlessness. Anger was directed at health care workers delivering bad news, externalizing feelings of inner conflict surrounding an inability to save the child.15,44 

Feelings of depression were linked to self-blame, a diminished sense of meaning and purpose, existential angst surrounding the inevitability of death, and loss of identity as a father. Depression was evident in emotional numbing, cutting off emotional connections with partners and children, whereas some experienced suicidal ideation.14,17,49,60,61 

Fathers felt overwhelmed and exhausted by the emotional and practical demands of living with and caring for their unwell child.16,35,44,60,62,65  There was a sense of loss of control over their mental and emotional capacity, with fathers feeling they might “lose it completely”44  or “just snap because it’s too much.”35  For some, this led to practical changes including leaving their jobs.34,65  Others described finding ways to refocus,62  adapt/accept,44,57  and independently carry their pain as coping mechanisms.35  But this did not feel possible for everyone: “If you tried to concentrate, you would be wasting your time. You would just be wasting [time] and spinning your wheels.”60 

Fathers found ways to work through the emotions associated with their loss and grief, adjusting to the changed relationship with the deceased. For some, this involved remembrance activities such as performing rituals in the child’s memory and speaking or writing to the child14,15,32,36,66  or to friends and family.66  These activities enabled fathers to adjust to the physical loss of their child while maintaining and forming a new relationship with them. Others tried to find ways to protect themselves67  and their loved ones in the grief process by concealing their pain35,48 : “I think 1 of the issues of men in general, and it is always difficult to generalize, is that men do not communicate terribly well at the best of times, because we are always taught from school to be very stoic and all the rest of it, and we don’t talk about issues or problems or anything else.”17 

This stoicism59  appeared to relate to social assumptions around masculinity, which made their grief private and different to their “wives.”15,17  Fathers received both positive14,18,35,37,48,68  and negative15,36,37  support with their loss-orientated tasks from friends and family. Some found the support of their partners and/or children to be crucial in their grief journey,14,35,37  whereas others experienced challenges in their significant relationships after the child’s death.14  Talking and sharing with professionals and peers enabled fathers to work through their intense grief feelings and experience a sense of togetherness18,37,48,68 ; this created a sense of a grief community.15,34,36,42  This was not the case for all fathers; some lacked support, advice, and information from professionals, the workplace,43,61  and from their social network, which left them feeling isolated.15,35,36 

Fathers managed their grief feelings by keeping busy with everyday tasks and responsibilities,14,15,64,66,69  keeping physically active14,64  and engaging in leisure activities.38,64  For some, their loss and restoration-orientated activities intertwined; they oscillated between the shock and trauma of their grief and the very practical tasks required as part of their loss and everyday life.49,66 

This theme highlights fathers’ experience of having greater appreciation for their life and increased perspective associated with posttraumatic growth.

Some fathers’ loss was associated with an enhanced sense of aliveness and of their own mortality. Realizing the finitude of their life made them want to embrace it and have a greater appreciation for the everyday,44,70  while recognizing the incredibility that they survived “the depths of hell” in terms of their emotional experience.66  There was also a new appreciation for loved ones after their loss.34,35,36,64  This helped some to keep moving forward14  although they felt “everything should just stop.”15  Many found new meaning in their lives, realizing what and who were important to them15,17,36,52 : “… makes you appreciate the 1 you do have, that’s for sure … made a new friend … know that there’s people out there much worse than I am … well, I’m glad we had the little bit of time we did.”64 

Some focused on prioritizing quality of living, relationships,36  and living in the moment.14  Fathers also experienced growth in their self-awareness34  and sensitivity to emotions, becoming more empathetic,14,17  compassionate, and reflective.15 

Religion and faith played an important role in some fathers’ grief journeys.34,35,53,63,66  These enabled them to step back, find the bigger picture34  or something positive from their loss,34,66  or to give thanks for the prayers their child received.53  Some experienced heightened reliance on faith as a source of solace or hope for a positive outcome.15,35,61 

This study shines light on the understudied population of fathers in pediatric palliative care. Our model (Fig 2) encompasses 6 multifaceted, overarching concepts describing a unique framework of fathers’ experiences of predeath and postdeath loss and grief. Our line of argument indicated that the traumatic event of an LLC diagnosis and subsequent death caused a self-crisis that marked fathers permanently and characterized them as burn victims16  or survivors.

There was an overlap between categories describing the predeath and postdeath loss and grief, which mirrors the clinical presentations and oscillations of grief symptoms. For example, fathers described trauma responses, ambivalent feelings regarding their loss, fatigue, anxiety and anger, unresolved grief, and guilt after receiving the diagnosis and postbereavement. There were specific elements of grief in the predeath cycle, which included distance-seeking or psychological minimization of the illness, reenacted past trauma, seeking control, and a complex/complicated relationship with hope, which was experienced as an emotional rollercoaster.16,44  After a child’s death, fathers coped through remembrance and restoration- and loss-orientated activities; they sought to redefine life and find comfort in religion. Several fathers described an existential angst often experienced when bereavement brought them into contact with a sense of their own and others’ mortality and subsequent loss of meaning and purpose.

Fathers’ responses to loss seemed to relate to gender roles and socialization surrounding emotional expression.15,17  Disenfranchised grief was particularly salient for their experiences; they were expected to support their families while describing a lack of control over their situation.15,35,44,60,62,65  Some reported fragile support networks15,35,36  and lack of support from staff,37  as well as a deterioration in mental health,15,17,26,35,35,44  including depressive and suicidal thoughts.14,17,44,60,64  Physical responses included shaking, migraines, tiredness, a sense of physical pain, sleep disturbance, and nightmares.44  Others experienced manifestations of the predeath loss and grief while maintaining hope16,18,45,52 ; hope can be used as a resource during the illness course, as well as for subsequent grief.

Gender socialization theory suggests that men are socialized into a more nonverbally expressive manner than women52 ; fathers tended to express anger rather than work through emotions.15  Normalizing this difference between mother/father grief may support progress toward reducing perceived stigma associated with men accessing mental health support.72  This, however, is an area that requires further study because this difference in emotive versus action-based coping may not be based in gender alone (or at all). In this regard, there are unrepresented fathers who have specific needs (young fathers who are often stereotyped as being especially irresponsible and uncaring73 ; gay or single fathers74  and those from ethnic minority groups).

The “new father” ideology of gender roles advocates for equal participation in caregiving responsibilities.75  However, traditionally and culturally, differences exist between mother and father roles in parenting.76  It is almost impossible for both parents to be “primary” caregivers; typically, health appointments are attended more frequently by mothers, who may be preferentially consulted by HCPs as a result.16,23,32,35,52  This may lead to a “stepping back” by fathers.77  During the coronavirus disease 2019 pandemic, hospitals restricted visiting access to only 1 parent on the wards and to outpatient appointments. Our study demonstrates the significance of including fathers in the decision-making, helping to counter a feeling of lack of control.45  International policies need to prioritize the importance of family-centered palliative care.12,13,78  Advancements in technology brought to the forefront by the pandemic, such as virtual appointments and flexible working, now make it possible to involve both parents in important discussions about their child’s palliative care.79  In addition, we recommend that all forms of written communication include both parents; for example, “Dear mother and father.” When fathers read the word parent, they regularly assume that the letter is intended for the mother.74 

There are a range of support services fathers could access; however, these vary significantly across countries. In the United Kingdom, for example, palliative care and other specialist bereavement services vary widely; although many services are led by hospices, others are supported by specialist networks, including pediatricians, nurses, and support workers with experience/training in palliative care. A need for more consistent approaches and equitable access to community services is crucial.80  In addition, navigating these services can be confusing for both HCPs and families, highlighting the need for clear referral pathways to prevent any further barriers to fathers accessing mental health support.

Bereavement support provided by hospices typically ends 1 year21  after death occurs, although interventions for grief symptoms may be most efficacious if offered at least 6 months postloss.22  Some families may need extensive support. There is a pattern toward mothers seeking and receiving more social support.61  Allowing self-referral at any stage of the process may encourage father uptake of support available through national/regional organizations. This support should include predeath grief counseling to allow fathers to adjust gradually to their loss, online bereavement groups, and enabling positive memories to cherish. Exploring delivery and engagement preferences is vital because fathers may prefer to participate in briefings or updates rather than support groups.74 

Our findings indicate that grief is a nonlinear and adaptive process, without clear boundaries or a finite timeline. It is a composite of overlapping and fluid phases whose characteristics are comorbid at various points. Our recommendation is that palliative clinical practice needs to reduce prescriptive assessment of grief based on stage theory81  because not everyone goes through an orderly sequence of reactions with defined stages. The stage model of response to loss can have devastating consequences82 ; it does not enable professionals to identify those at high risk or experiencing complicated grief, nor to design and allocate appropriate treatment services.83  It can result in ineffective support from social networks or potentially harmful responses by HCPs.82 

A recent review3  identified 15 bereavement interventions provided by HCPs to support parents; only 4 commenced before the child’s death.8487  Our findings indicated that coping with the anticipatory feelings prepared some fathers for postbereavement grief15 ; for others, it had a negative impact on coping,64  yet others distanced from the child to minimize the pain of the anticipated death25,68  while maintaining hope,44  or experienced a sense of battle.16  Such diverse responses make it difficult to assess when fathers are receptive to support and to create standardized intervention protocols for bereavement care during the end-of-life phase.3  Clinical assessment should include secondary stressors, such as ongoing personal and interpersonal factors, social and financial contexts15,26,35,36,62  of grieving, and cultural82  and religious meanings34,35,52,61,66  which contribute to their coping. Effective coping alternates between 2 or more different coping strategies, depending on the demands at a specific time.88  If HCPs could determine with which processes fathers experience difficulties, appropriate intervention components could be selected.3  Individualized approaches in synergy with compassionate listening, validation, and normalizing fathers’ experiences and preferred coping styles are needed.5 

It is unclear how psychological treatment may exert its positive effects on grief.22  Our model opens possibilities for support in the palliative care system in both the predeath and postdeath phases, including psychoeducation, self-care activities, and treatment of specific problems (sleep hygiene,44  exercise and psychological/behavioral medicine for fatigue,89  interventions for cognitive functioning,90  anticipatory guidance about regret5 ). Fathers valued follow-up contact after a child’s death.37  Our recommendation is that follow-up contact is an important part of palliative care services because it can result in positive reappraisals fostering adaptive coping behaviors.3 

To our knowledge, this is the first meta-ethnography focusing on fathers’ loss and grief in the context of their child’s LLC; and the first attempt to develop a conceptual model that provides a dramatic window into the salience of their experiences in the predeath and postdeath phases. Several limitations are noted. Studies typically included relatively small samples of fathers. We addressed gender imbalance in pediatric research previously.1  We argue that race, ethnicity, faith, immigration status, social class, (dis)ability, aging and gender diversity, and their association with loss and bereavement outcomes are underexplored in palliative care research.91  Most studies were conducted in developed countries; we advocate for culturally diverse designs coproduced92  with bereaved parents; these should not necessarily request fathers to verbally articulate their emotional experiences (eg, the use of photovoice).52  Longitudinal approaches to address grief symptoms at key time points are needed. Although fathers’ characteristics, data collection times, and settings varied greatly, we believe that their impact on findings warrants a separate and focused analysis.1,5  Furthermore, we relied on the data reported in included studies, which may not fully reflect the original data; this may be exacerbated by the bias toward lower father participation in research.1  In mixed samples, there was a bias toward mothers’ opinions. Seven out of the 11 studies focusing solely on fathers were conducted by female researchers15,37,44,58,59,62,69 ; none of these reported if/how unconscious bias around gender norms was managed, nor addressed it as a study limitation. Previous studies highlighted participants’ efforts to protect their masculinities had they been interviewed by researchers of different genders93 ; this led them to emphasize some aspects about themselves as men while downplaying others.94  Four mixed-gender research teams employed bracketing interviews,23  auditability,16  peer debriefing process,62  and experts by experience35  to manage bias. This is an area that merits further research.

Fathers’ grief starts at child’s diagnosis of LLC and presents a mixture of difficult emotions which are comorbid at various points. Their responses to the traumatic loss relate to gender roles and socialization surrounding emotional expression. These are shaped by cultural, personal, and religious contexts. Many fathers experience disenfranchised grief and report deterioration in mental health; this is exacerbated among unrepresented categories of fathers. Clinical practice needs to reduce prescriptive assessment of grief and embrace individualized approaches aimed at normalizing fathers’ experiences and preferred coping styles.

Dr Postavaru designed the study, coordinated, supervised, and conducted the data collection, analysis, and quality assessment, drafted the initial manuscript, and reviewed and revised the manuscript; Ms Hamilton assisted in the data analysis and the writeup, and reviewed and revised the manuscript; Ms Davies conducted the data collection and extraction, assisted in the analysis and quality assessment, and reviewed the final draft; Ms Swaby assisted in designing the study and the writeup, and reviewed the final draft; Dr Michael assisted in designing the study and the writeup, and critically reviewed the final draft for clinical input; Dr Swaby assisted in the writeup; Dr Mukaetova-Ladinska critically reviewed the final draft for clinical input; and all authors approved the final manuscript as submitted and agree to be accountable for all aspects of the work.

This study is registered at PROSPERO, #CRD42021233258, https://www.crd.york.ac.uk/PROSPERO/display_record.php?RecordID=233258.

FUNDING: No external funding.

CONFLICT OF INTEREST DISCLOSURES: The authors have indicated they have no relevant conflicts of interest relevant to this article to disclose.

HCP

health care professional

LLC

life-limiting condition

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