When Kate Middleton announced her recent cancer diagnosis, she emphasized the time she and her husband, William, Prince of Wales, took to share the news with their three children.
Talking to pre-adolescent children about serious illnesses is the right course of action for any family because children can sense change, said Kathleen Ingman, a pediatric psychologist at the Cancer and Blood Institute at Childrenâs Hospital Los Angeles.
âKeeping information from them, even from young children, can often lead to anxiety because they know something is happening but donât know what it is,â Ingman said.
In a video announcement, the Princess of Wales said that the undisclosed form of cancer was detected after she underwent a âmajor abdominal surgeryâ in London at the beginning of the year. She is currently undergoing chemotherapy.
The 42-year-old said itâs taken time to recover from surgery, undergo treatment, and explain her medical situation to her three children â Princes George, 10, and Louis, 5, and Princess Charlotte, 8 â âin a way thatâs appropriate for them and to reassure them that Iâm going to be OK.â
Ingman and Lauren Schneider, clinical director of child and adolescent programs for grief support center Our House, spoke to The Times about how to talk to young children about serious illness and its effect on the whole family.
As their first piece of advice, they encourage families to make kids a part of the discussion right away because children are very sensitive to minute changes in their environment, Schneider said.
âIt prevents [the information] from growing into a big piece of news that then feels like a scary thing to drop all at once after a delay,â Ingman said.
A lack of information can also lead the child to be fearful, she said, or their imagination might âtake them places that might end up being worse than what the actual truth is.â
The first of many conversations about a serious illness
Talking about a serious illness with a child is unique to each family and medical situation.
Experts say the conversation can start around a childâs observation of the situation â for example, if a parent or another adult in their life has been going to see the doctor more than usual, or if the person has been noticeably sick.
Begin the conversation with what they know by asking such things as, âRemember when this happened?â or âDid you notice this person wasnât feeling well?â
After the child responds with their observation, the adult can then go into explaining whatâs happening. (More on how to do that below.)
This is also a good time to reassure the child that what is happening is not their fault, Schneider said.
âSmall children are very egocentric, they usually experience emotions that their parents have as having something to do with them,â she said.
Parents should understand that one conversation about the situation wonât suffice.
The child will let you know when theyâre ready for more information. Experts say that when children ask questions spontaneously, later in the day or on another day, that means theyâre ready to hear more.
Young children tend to ask the same question over and over, which tells the adult they want to learn more about the situation, Ingman said. This is a good framework for giving information incrementally through a series of conversations.
âIt just helps reassure them that the adults in their life are trustworthy,â Ingman said, because the adults are informing them.
If a child doesnât ask questions, the parent or guardian should check in with them or offer another trusted adult whoâs available to talk.
During the conversation
Itâs OK to be open and honest about whatâs happening and how it can affect the entire family.
Part of that honesty includes using actual medical terms like cancer or chemotherapy. Ingman said the terms are scarier to adults than to children because kids donât have a grasp of their meaning yet.
Itâs an opportunity to explain the terms to them so they are prepared for how the illness will affect their loved one. Using a term also demystifies it and gets them comfortable hearing it.
Experts discourage guardians from using euphemisms or vague statements like âMom is sick,â because it could confuse the child.
For example, if a childâs family member died from complications of a serious but unspecified illness, they might think another person with an unspecified illness could have the same outcome.
âItâs actually scarier for kids to hear âsickâ because then theyâre going to hear other people are âsickâ and theyâre going to think that those people are going to die,â Schneider said.
By using the right terms, the parent can talk about how treatment is different for everyone or how an early diagnosis can be different from a late one.
For young children, the first explanation will be short and simple.
Pay attention to how the child is responding to the conversation, Ingman said. They might be emotional if itâs very difficult news, and thatâs normal. Thereâs no formula for how to conduct this conversation and no guarantees about how it will go, so itâs customary to take breaks and to allow time for follow-up questions.
A part of the conversation is how the illness will affect the whole family, which includes telling the child how this might change their routine.
Let the child know if a different family member will pick them up from school, or if a relative will stay with them at night should the adult need to go to the hospital. Telling them about these changes but working to keep as much of their routine going is reassuring to them, Ingman said.
Signs of distress
A childâs reactions to this conversation can run the gamut because each child is unique. Itâs normal for a child to not react, just as itâs normal to be very distressed.
It becomes a concern when the child has prolonged signs of distress that donât go away. These include getting worse grades at school, being withdrawn or not being able to engage in activities the child typically enjoyed.
Other signs, Schneider said, include not wanting to be separated from the adult whoâs sick, not sleeping independently or not wanting to go to school.
In this scenario, Schneider advises guardians to ask the child whatâs causing them to act this way, whatâs worrying them or whatâs bothering them, because the adult and child can then talk about it.
âTheir behavior is their way of showing their pain, and thatâs something that parents need to remember because [children] canât come right out and say it,â she said.
Get the child involved
Along with being brought into a conversation thatâs appropriate for their age, children can also be given a hands-on role.
Ingman said giving the child tasks such as drawing a picture, taking a photo or writing a note for the ill family member gives them some sense of agency in the situation.
What happens if the illness becomes terminal
Itâs extremely important that kids have an opportunity to prepare if a parent or sibling is not going to survive, because the family can collectively make choices about how to spend those final days and how to say goodbye, Schneider said.
âIf theyâre not given the information,â she said, âthe fear of the unknown is much worse for them.â
When Kate Middleton announced her recent cancer diagnosis, she emphasized the time she and her husband, William, Prince of Wales, took to share the news with their three children.
Talking to pre-adolescent children about serious illnesses is the right course of action for any family because children can sense change, said Kathleen Ingman, a pediatric psychologist at the Cancer and Blood Institute at Childrenâs Hospital Los Angeles.
âKeeping information from them, even from young children, can often lead to anxiety because they know something is happening but donât know what it is,â Ingman said.
In a video announcement, the Princess of Wales said that the undisclosed form of cancer was detected after she underwent a âmajor abdominal surgeryâ in London at the beginning of the year. She is currently undergoing chemotherapy.
The 42-year-old said itâs taken time to recover from surgery, undergo treatment, and explain her medical situation to her three children â Princes George, 10, and Louis, 5, and Princess Charlotte, 8 â âin a way thatâs appropriate for them and to reassure them that Iâm going to be OK.â
Ingman and Lauren Schneider, clinical director of child and adolescent programs for grief support center Our House, spoke to The Times about how to talk to young children about serious illness and its effect on the whole family.
As their first piece of advice, they encourage families to make kids a part of the discussion right away because children are very sensitive to minute changes in their environment, Schneider said.
âIt prevents [the information] from growing into a big piece of news that then feels like a scary thing to drop all at once after a delay,â Ingman said.
A lack of information can also lead the child to be fearful, she said, or their imagination might âtake them places that might end up being worse than what the actual truth is.â
The first of many conversations about a serious illness
Talking about a serious illness with a child is unique to each family and medical situation.
Experts say the conversation can start around a childâs observation of the situation â for example, if a parent or another adult in their life has been going to see the doctor more than usual, or if the person has been noticeably sick.
Begin the conversation with what they know by asking such things as, âRemember when this happened?â or âDid you notice this person wasnât feeling well?â
After the child responds with their observation, the adult can then go into explaining whatâs happening. (More on how to do that below.)
This is also a good time to reassure the child that what is happening is not their fault, Schneider said.
âSmall children are very egocentric, they usually experience emotions that their parents have as having something to do with them,â she said.
Parents should understand that one conversation about the situation wonât suffice.
The child will let you know when theyâre ready for more information. Experts say that when children ask questions spontaneously, later in the day or on another day, that means theyâre ready to hear more.
Young children tend to ask the same question over and over, which tells the adult they want to learn more about the situation, Ingman said. This is a good framework for giving information incrementally through a series of conversations.
âIt just helps reassure them that the adults in their life are trustworthy,â Ingman said, because the adults are informing them.
If a child doesnât ask questions, the parent or guardian should check in with them or offer another trusted adult whoâs available to talk.
During the conversation
Itâs OK to be open and honest about whatâs happening and how it can affect the entire family.
Part of that honesty includes using actual medical terms like cancer or chemotherapy. Ingman said the terms are scarier to adults than to children because kids donât have a grasp of their meaning yet.
Itâs an opportunity to explain the terms to them so they are prepared for how the illness will affect their loved one. Using a term also demystifies it and gets them comfortable hearing it.
Experts discourage guardians from using euphemisms or vague statements like âMom is sick,â because it could confuse the child.
For example, if a childâs family member died from complications of a serious but unspecified illness, they might think another person with an unspecified illness could have the same outcome.
âItâs actually scarier for kids to hear âsickâ because then theyâre going to hear other people are âsickâ and theyâre going to think that those people are going to die,â Schneider said.
By using the right terms, the parent can talk about how treatment is different for everyone or how an early diagnosis can be different from a late one.
For young children, the first explanation will be short and simple.
Pay attention to how the child is responding to the conversation, Ingman said. They might be emotional if itâs very difficult news, and thatâs normal. Thereâs no formula for how to conduct this conversation and no guarantees about how it will go, so itâs customary to take breaks and to allow time for follow-up questions.
A part of the conversation is how the illness will affect the whole family, which includes telling the child how this might change their routine.
Let the child know if a different family member will pick them up from school, or if a relative will stay with them at night should the adult need to go to the hospital. Telling them about these changes but working to keep as much of their routine going is reassuring to them, Ingman said.
Signs of distress
A childâs reactions to this conversation can run the gamut because each child is unique. Itâs normal for a child to not react, just as itâs normal to be very distressed.
It becomes a concern when the child has prolonged signs of distress that donât go away. These include getting worse grades at school, being withdrawn or not being able to engage in activities the child typically enjoyed.
Other signs, Schneider said, include not wanting to be separated from the adult whoâs sick, not sleeping independently or not wanting to go to school.
In this scenario, Schneider advises guardians to ask the child whatâs causing them to act this way, whatâs worrying them or whatâs bothering them, because the adult and child can then talk about it.
âTheir behavior is their way of showing their pain, and thatâs something that parents need to remember because [children] canât come right out and say it,â she said.
Get the child involved
Along with being brought into a conversation thatâs appropriate for their age, children can also be given a hands-on role.
Ingman said giving the child tasks such as drawing a picture, taking a photo or writing a note for the ill family member gives them some sense of agency in the situation.
What happens if the illness becomes terminal
Itâs extremely important that kids have an opportunity to prepare if a parent or sibling is not going to survive, because the family can collectively make choices about how to spend those final days and how to say goodbye, Schneider said.
âIf theyâre not given the information,â she said, âthe fear of the unknown is much worse for them.â
When Kate Middleton announced her recent cancer diagnosis, she emphasized the time she and her husband, William, Prince of Wales, took to share the news with their three children.
Talking to pre-adolescent children about serious illnesses is the right course of action for any family because children can sense change, said Kathleen Ingman, a pediatric psychologist at the Cancer and Blood Institute at Childrenâs Hospital Los Angeles.
âKeeping information from them, even from young children, can often lead to anxiety because they know something is happening but donât know what it is,â Ingman said.
In a video announcement, the Princess of Wales said that the undisclosed form of cancer was detected after she underwent a âmajor abdominal surgeryâ in London at the beginning of the year. She is currently undergoing chemotherapy.
The 42-year-old said itâs taken time to recover from surgery, undergo treatment, and explain her medical situation to her three children â Princes George, 10, and Louis, 5, and Princess Charlotte, 8 â âin a way thatâs appropriate for them and to reassure them that Iâm going to be OK.â
Ingman and Lauren Schneider, clinical director of child and adolescent programs for grief support center Our House, spoke to The Times about how to talk to young children about serious illness and its effect on the whole family.
As their first piece of advice, they encourage families to make kids a part of the discussion right away because children are very sensitive to minute changes in their environment, Schneider said.
âIt prevents [the information] from growing into a big piece of news that then feels like a scary thing to drop all at once after a delay,â Ingman said.
A lack of information can also lead the child to be fearful, she said, or their imagination might âtake them places that might end up being worse than what the actual truth is.â
The first of many conversations about a serious illness
Talking about a serious illness with a child is unique to each family and medical situation.
Experts say the conversation can start around a childâs observation of the situation â for example, if a parent or another adult in their life has been going to see the doctor more than usual, or if the person has been noticeably sick.
Begin the conversation with what they know by asking such things as, âRemember when this happened?â or âDid you notice this person wasnât feeling well?â
After the child responds with their observation, the adult can then go into explaining whatâs happening. (More on how to do that below.)
This is also a good time to reassure the child that what is happening is not their fault, Schneider said.
âSmall children are very egocentric, they usually experience emotions that their parents have as having something to do with them,â she said.
Parents should understand that one conversation about the situation wonât suffice.
The child will let you know when theyâre ready for more information. Experts say that when children ask questions spontaneously, later in the day or on another day, that means theyâre ready to hear more.
Young children tend to ask the same question over and over, which tells the adult they want to learn more about the situation, Ingman said. This is a good framework for giving information incrementally through a series of conversations.
âIt just helps reassure them that the adults in their life are trustworthy,â Ingman said, because the adults are informing them.
If a child doesnât ask questions, the parent or guardian should check in with them or offer another trusted adult whoâs available to talk.
During the conversation
Itâs OK to be open and honest about whatâs happening and how it can affect the entire family.
Part of that honesty includes using actual medical terms like cancer or chemotherapy. Ingman said the terms are scarier to adults than to children because kids donât have a grasp of their meaning yet.
Itâs an opportunity to explain the terms to them so they are prepared for how the illness will affect their loved one. Using a term also demystifies it and gets them comfortable hearing it.
Experts discourage guardians from using euphemisms or vague statements like âMom is sick,â because it could confuse the child.
For example, if a childâs family member died from complications of a serious but unspecified illness, they might think another person with an unspecified illness could have the same outcome.
âItâs actually scarier for kids to hear âsickâ because then theyâre going to hear other people are âsickâ and theyâre going to think that those people are going to die,â Schneider said.
By using the right terms, the parent can talk about how treatment is different for everyone or how an early diagnosis can be different from a late one.
For young children, the first explanation will be short and simple.
Pay attention to how the child is responding to the conversation, Ingman said. They might be emotional if itâs very difficult news, and thatâs normal. Thereâs no formula for how to conduct this conversation and no guarantees about how it will go, so itâs customary to take breaks and to allow time for follow-up questions.
A part of the conversation is how the illness will affect the whole family, which includes telling the child how this might change their routine.
Let the child know if a different family member will pick them up from school, or if a relative will stay with them at night should the adult need to go to the hospital. Telling them about these changes but working to keep as much of their routine going is reassuring to them, Ingman said.
Signs of distress
A childâs reactions to this conversation can run the gamut because each child is unique. Itâs normal for a child to not react, just as itâs normal to be very distressed.
It becomes a concern when the child has prolonged signs of distress that donât go away. These include getting worse grades at school, being withdrawn or not being able to engage in activities the child typically enjoyed.
Other signs, Schneider said, include not wanting to be separated from the adult whoâs sick, not sleeping independently or not wanting to go to school.
In this scenario, Schneider advises guardians to ask the child whatâs causing them to act this way, whatâs worrying them or whatâs bothering them, because the adult and child can then talk about it.
âTheir behavior is their way of showing their pain, and thatâs something that parents need to remember because [children] canât come right out and say it,â she said.
Get the child involved
Along with being brought into a conversation thatâs appropriate for their age, children can also be given a hands-on role.
Ingman said giving the child tasks such as drawing a picture, taking a photo or writing a note for the ill family member gives them some sense of agency in the situation.
What happens if the illness becomes terminal
Itâs extremely important that kids have an opportunity to prepare if a parent or sibling is not going to survive, because the family can collectively make choices about how to spend those final days and how to say goodbye, Schneider said.
âIf theyâre not given the information,â she said, âthe fear of the unknown is much worse for them.â
When Kate Middleton announced her recent cancer diagnosis, she emphasized the time she and her husband, William, Prince of Wales, took to share the news with their three children.
Talking to pre-adolescent children about serious illnesses is the right course of action for any family because children can sense change, said Kathleen Ingman, a pediatric psychologist at the Cancer and Blood Institute at Childrenâs Hospital Los Angeles.
âKeeping information from them, even from young children, can often lead to anxiety because they know something is happening but donât know what it is,â Ingman said.
In a video announcement, the Princess of Wales said that the undisclosed form of cancer was detected after she underwent a âmajor abdominal surgeryâ in London at the beginning of the year. She is currently undergoing chemotherapy.
The 42-year-old said itâs taken time to recover from surgery, undergo treatment, and explain her medical situation to her three children â Princes George, 10, and Louis, 5, and Princess Charlotte, 8 â âin a way thatâs appropriate for them and to reassure them that Iâm going to be OK.â
Ingman and Lauren Schneider, clinical director of child and adolescent programs for grief support center Our House, spoke to The Times about how to talk to young children about serious illness and its effect on the whole family.
As their first piece of advice, they encourage families to make kids a part of the discussion right away because children are very sensitive to minute changes in their environment, Schneider said.
âIt prevents [the information] from growing into a big piece of news that then feels like a scary thing to drop all at once after a delay,â Ingman said.
A lack of information can also lead the child to be fearful, she said, or their imagination might âtake them places that might end up being worse than what the actual truth is.â
The first of many conversations about a serious illness
Talking about a serious illness with a child is unique to each family and medical situation.
Experts say the conversation can start around a childâs observation of the situation â for example, if a parent or another adult in their life has been going to see the doctor more than usual, or if the person has been noticeably sick.
Begin the conversation with what they know by asking such things as, âRemember when this happened?â or âDid you notice this person wasnât feeling well?â
After the child responds with their observation, the adult can then go into explaining whatâs happening. (More on how to do that below.)
This is also a good time to reassure the child that what is happening is not their fault, Schneider said.
âSmall children are very egocentric, they usually experience emotions that their parents have as having something to do with them,â she said.
Parents should understand that one conversation about the situation wonât suffice.
The child will let you know when theyâre ready for more information. Experts say that when children ask questions spontaneously, later in the day or on another day, that means theyâre ready to hear more.
Young children tend to ask the same question over and over, which tells the adult they want to learn more about the situation, Ingman said. This is a good framework for giving information incrementally through a series of conversations.
âIt just helps reassure them that the adults in their life are trustworthy,â Ingman said, because the adults are informing them.
If a child doesnât ask questions, the parent or guardian should check in with them or offer another trusted adult whoâs available to talk.
During the conversation
Itâs OK to be open and honest about whatâs happening and how it can affect the entire family.
Part of that honesty includes using actual medical terms like cancer or chemotherapy. Ingman said the terms are scarier to adults than to children because kids donât have a grasp of their meaning yet.
Itâs an opportunity to explain the terms to them so they are prepared for how the illness will affect their loved one. Using a term also demystifies it and gets them comfortable hearing it.
Experts discourage guardians from using euphemisms or vague statements like âMom is sick,â because it could confuse the child.
For example, if a childâs family member died from complications of a serious but unspecified illness, they might think another person with an unspecified illness could have the same outcome.
âItâs actually scarier for kids to hear âsickâ because then theyâre going to hear other people are âsickâ and theyâre going to think that those people are going to die,â Schneider said.
By using the right terms, the parent can talk about how treatment is different for everyone or how an early diagnosis can be different from a late one.
For young children, the first explanation will be short and simple.
Pay attention to how the child is responding to the conversation, Ingman said. They might be emotional if itâs very difficult news, and thatâs normal. Thereâs no formula for how to conduct this conversation and no guarantees about how it will go, so itâs customary to take breaks and to allow time for follow-up questions.
A part of the conversation is how the illness will affect the whole family, which includes telling the child how this might change their routine.
Let the child know if a different family member will pick them up from school, or if a relative will stay with them at night should the adult need to go to the hospital. Telling them about these changes but working to keep as much of their routine going is reassuring to them, Ingman said.
Signs of distress
A childâs reactions to this conversation can run the gamut because each child is unique. Itâs normal for a child to not react, just as itâs normal to be very distressed.
It becomes a concern when the child has prolonged signs of distress that donât go away. These include getting worse grades at school, being withdrawn or not being able to engage in activities the child typically enjoyed.
Other signs, Schneider said, include not wanting to be separated from the adult whoâs sick, not sleeping independently or not wanting to go to school.
In this scenario, Schneider advises guardians to ask the child whatâs causing them to act this way, whatâs worrying them or whatâs bothering them, because the adult and child can then talk about it.
âTheir behavior is their way of showing their pain, and thatâs something that parents need to remember because [children] canât come right out and say it,â she said.
Get the child involved
Along with being brought into a conversation thatâs appropriate for their age, children can also be given a hands-on role.
Ingman said giving the child tasks such as drawing a picture, taking a photo or writing a note for the ill family member gives them some sense of agency in the situation.
What happens if the illness becomes terminal
Itâs extremely important that kids have an opportunity to prepare if a parent or sibling is not going to survive, because the family can collectively make choices about how to spend those final days and how to say goodbye, Schneider said.
âIf theyâre not given the information,â she said, âthe fear of the unknown is much worse for them.â
When Kate Middleton announced her recent cancer diagnosis, she emphasized the time she and her husband, William, Prince of Wales, took to share the news with their three children.
Talking to pre-adolescent children about serious illnesses is the right course of action for any family because children can sense change, said Kathleen Ingman, a pediatric psychologist at the Cancer and Blood Institute at Childrenâs Hospital Los Angeles.
âKeeping information from them, even from young children, can often lead to anxiety because they know something is happening but donât know what it is,â Ingman said.
In a video announcement, the Princess of Wales said that the undisclosed form of cancer was detected after she underwent a âmajor abdominal surgeryâ in London at the beginning of the year. She is currently undergoing chemotherapy.
The 42-year-old said itâs taken time to recover from surgery, undergo treatment, and explain her medical situation to her three children â Princes George, 10, and Louis, 5, and Princess Charlotte, 8 â âin a way thatâs appropriate for them and to reassure them that Iâm going to be OK.â
Ingman and Lauren Schneider, clinical director of child and adolescent programs for grief support center Our House, spoke to The Times about how to talk to young children about serious illness and its effect on the whole family.
As their first piece of advice, they encourage families to make kids a part of the discussion right away because children are very sensitive to minute changes in their environment, Schneider said.
âIt prevents [the information] from growing into a big piece of news that then feels like a scary thing to drop all at once after a delay,â Ingman said.
A lack of information can also lead the child to be fearful, she said, or their imagination might âtake them places that might end up being worse than what the actual truth is.â
The first of many conversations about a serious illness
Talking about a serious illness with a child is unique to each family and medical situation.
Experts say the conversation can start around a childâs observation of the situation â for example, if a parent or another adult in their life has been going to see the doctor more than usual, or if the person has been noticeably sick.
Begin the conversation with what they know by asking such things as, âRemember when this happened?â or âDid you notice this person wasnât feeling well?â
After the child responds with their observation, the adult can then go into explaining whatâs happening. (More on how to do that below.)
This is also a good time to reassure the child that what is happening is not their fault, Schneider said.
âSmall children are very egocentric, they usually experience emotions that their parents have as having something to do with them,â she said.
Parents should understand that one conversation about the situation wonât suffice.
The child will let you know when theyâre ready for more information. Experts say that when children ask questions spontaneously, later in the day or on another day, that means theyâre ready to hear more.
Young children tend to ask the same question over and over, which tells the adult they want to learn more about the situation, Ingman said. This is a good framework for giving information incrementally through a series of conversations.
âIt just helps reassure them that the adults in their life are trustworthy,â Ingman said, because the adults are informing them.
If a child doesnât ask questions, the parent or guardian should check in with them or offer another trusted adult whoâs available to talk.
During the conversation
Itâs OK to be open and honest about whatâs happening and how it can affect the entire family.
Part of that honesty includes using actual medical terms like cancer or chemotherapy. Ingman said the terms are scarier to adults than to children because kids donât have a grasp of their meaning yet.
Itâs an opportunity to explain the terms to them so they are prepared for how the illness will affect their loved one. Using a term also demystifies it and gets them comfortable hearing it.
Experts discourage guardians from using euphemisms or vague statements like âMom is sick,â because it could confuse the child.
For example, if a childâs family member died from complications of a serious but unspecified illness, they might think another person with an unspecified illness could have the same outcome.
âItâs actually scarier for kids to hear âsickâ because then theyâre going to hear other people are âsickâ and theyâre going to think that those people are going to die,â Schneider said.
By using the right terms, the parent can talk about how treatment is different for everyone or how an early diagnosis can be different from a late one.
For young children, the first explanation will be short and simple.
Pay attention to how the child is responding to the conversation, Ingman said. They might be emotional if itâs very difficult news, and thatâs normal. Thereâs no formula for how to conduct this conversation and no guarantees about how it will go, so itâs customary to take breaks and to allow time for follow-up questions.
A part of the conversation is how the illness will affect the whole family, which includes telling the child how this might change their routine.
Let the child know if a different family member will pick them up from school, or if a relative will stay with them at night should the adult need to go to the hospital. Telling them about these changes but working to keep as much of their routine going is reassuring to them, Ingman said.
Signs of distress
A childâs reactions to this conversation can run the gamut because each child is unique. Itâs normal for a child to not react, just as itâs normal to be very distressed.
It becomes a concern when the child has prolonged signs of distress that donât go away. These include getting worse grades at school, being withdrawn or not being able to engage in activities the child typically enjoyed.
Other signs, Schneider said, include not wanting to be separated from the adult whoâs sick, not sleeping independently or not wanting to go to school.
In this scenario, Schneider advises guardians to ask the child whatâs causing them to act this way, whatâs worrying them or whatâs bothering them, because the adult and child can then talk about it.
âTheir behavior is their way of showing their pain, and thatâs something that parents need to remember because [children] canât come right out and say it,â she said.
Get the child involved
Along with being brought into a conversation thatâs appropriate for their age, children can also be given a hands-on role.
Ingman said giving the child tasks such as drawing a picture, taking a photo or writing a note for the ill family member gives them some sense of agency in the situation.
What happens if the illness becomes terminal
Itâs extremely important that kids have an opportunity to prepare if a parent or sibling is not going to survive, because the family can collectively make choices about how to spend those final days and how to say goodbye, Schneider said.
âIf theyâre not given the information,â she said, âthe fear of the unknown is much worse for them.â
When Kate Middleton announced her recent cancer diagnosis, she emphasized the time she and her husband, William, Prince of Wales, took to share the news with their three children.
Talking to pre-adolescent children about serious illnesses is the right course of action for any family because children can sense change, said Kathleen Ingman, a pediatric psychologist at the Cancer and Blood Institute at Childrenâs Hospital Los Angeles.
âKeeping information from them, even from young children, can often lead to anxiety because they know something is happening but donât know what it is,â Ingman said.
In a video announcement, the Princess of Wales said that the undisclosed form of cancer was detected after she underwent a âmajor abdominal surgeryâ in London at the beginning of the year. She is currently undergoing chemotherapy.
The 42-year-old said itâs taken time to recover from surgery, undergo treatment, and explain her medical situation to her three children â Princes George, 10, and Louis, 5, and Princess Charlotte, 8 â âin a way thatâs appropriate for them and to reassure them that Iâm going to be OK.â
Ingman and Lauren Schneider, clinical director of child and adolescent programs for grief support center Our House, spoke to The Times about how to talk to young children about serious illness and its effect on the whole family.
As their first piece of advice, they encourage families to make kids a part of the discussion right away because children are very sensitive to minute changes in their environment, Schneider said.
âIt prevents [the information] from growing into a big piece of news that then feels like a scary thing to drop all at once after a delay,â Ingman said.
A lack of information can also lead the child to be fearful, she said, or their imagination might âtake them places that might end up being worse than what the actual truth is.â
The first of many conversations about a serious illness
Talking about a serious illness with a child is unique to each family and medical situation.
Experts say the conversation can start around a childâs observation of the situation â for example, if a parent or another adult in their life has been going to see the doctor more than usual, or if the person has been noticeably sick.
Begin the conversation with what they know by asking such things as, âRemember when this happened?â or âDid you notice this person wasnât feeling well?â
After the child responds with their observation, the adult can then go into explaining whatâs happening. (More on how to do that below.)
This is also a good time to reassure the child that what is happening is not their fault, Schneider said.
âSmall children are very egocentric, they usually experience emotions that their parents have as having something to do with them,â she said.
Parents should understand that one conversation about the situation wonât suffice.
The child will let you know when theyâre ready for more information. Experts say that when children ask questions spontaneously, later in the day or on another day, that means theyâre ready to hear more.
Young children tend to ask the same question over and over, which tells the adult they want to learn more about the situation, Ingman said. This is a good framework for giving information incrementally through a series of conversations.
âIt just helps reassure them that the adults in their life are trustworthy,â Ingman said, because the adults are informing them.
If a child doesnât ask questions, the parent or guardian should check in with them or offer another trusted adult whoâs available to talk.
During the conversation
Itâs OK to be open and honest about whatâs happening and how it can affect the entire family.
Part of that honesty includes using actual medical terms like cancer or chemotherapy. Ingman said the terms are scarier to adults than to children because kids donât have a grasp of their meaning yet.
Itâs an opportunity to explain the terms to them so they are prepared for how the illness will affect their loved one. Using a term also demystifies it and gets them comfortable hearing it.
Experts discourage guardians from using euphemisms or vague statements like âMom is sick,â because it could confuse the child.
For example, if a childâs family member died from complications of a serious but unspecified illness, they might think another person with an unspecified illness could have the same outcome.
âItâs actually scarier for kids to hear âsickâ because then theyâre going to hear other people are âsickâ and theyâre going to think that those people are going to die,â Schneider said.
By using the right terms, the parent can talk about how treatment is different for everyone or how an early diagnosis can be different from a late one.
For young children, the first explanation will be short and simple.
Pay attention to how the child is responding to the conversation, Ingman said. They might be emotional if itâs very difficult news, and thatâs normal. Thereâs no formula for how to conduct this conversation and no guarantees about how it will go, so itâs customary to take breaks and to allow time for follow-up questions.
A part of the conversation is how the illness will affect the whole family, which includes telling the child how this might change their routine.
Let the child know if a different family member will pick them up from school, or if a relative will stay with them at night should the adult need to go to the hospital. Telling them about these changes but working to keep as much of their routine going is reassuring to them, Ingman said.
Signs of distress
A childâs reactions to this conversation can run the gamut because each child is unique. Itâs normal for a child to not react, just as itâs normal to be very distressed.
It becomes a concern when the child has prolonged signs of distress that donât go away. These include getting worse grades at school, being withdrawn or not being able to engage in activities the child typically enjoyed.
Other signs, Schneider said, include not wanting to be separated from the adult whoâs sick, not sleeping independently or not wanting to go to school.
In this scenario, Schneider advises guardians to ask the child whatâs causing them to act this way, whatâs worrying them or whatâs bothering them, because the adult and child can then talk about it.
âTheir behavior is their way of showing their pain, and thatâs something that parents need to remember because [children] canât come right out and say it,â she said.
Get the child involved
Along with being brought into a conversation thatâs appropriate for their age, children can also be given a hands-on role.
Ingman said giving the child tasks such as drawing a picture, taking a photo or writing a note for the ill family member gives them some sense of agency in the situation.
What happens if the illness becomes terminal
Itâs extremely important that kids have an opportunity to prepare if a parent or sibling is not going to survive, because the family can collectively make choices about how to spend those final days and how to say goodbye, Schneider said.
âIf theyâre not given the information,â she said, âthe fear of the unknown is much worse for them.â
When Kate Middleton announced her recent cancer diagnosis, she emphasized the time she and her husband, William, Prince of Wales, took to share the news with their three children.
Talking to pre-adolescent children about serious illnesses is the right course of action for any family because children can sense change, said Kathleen Ingman, a pediatric psychologist at the Cancer and Blood Institute at Childrenâs Hospital Los Angeles.
âKeeping information from them, even from young children, can often lead to anxiety because they know something is happening but donât know what it is,â Ingman said.
In a video announcement, the Princess of Wales said that the undisclosed form of cancer was detected after she underwent a âmajor abdominal surgeryâ in London at the beginning of the year. She is currently undergoing chemotherapy.
The 42-year-old said itâs taken time to recover from surgery, undergo treatment, and explain her medical situation to her three children â Princes George, 10, and Louis, 5, and Princess Charlotte, 8 â âin a way thatâs appropriate for them and to reassure them that Iâm going to be OK.â
Ingman and Lauren Schneider, clinical director of child and adolescent programs for grief support center Our House, spoke to The Times about how to talk to young children about serious illness and its effect on the whole family.
As their first piece of advice, they encourage families to make kids a part of the discussion right away because children are very sensitive to minute changes in their environment, Schneider said.
âIt prevents [the information] from growing into a big piece of news that then feels like a scary thing to drop all at once after a delay,â Ingman said.
A lack of information can also lead the child to be fearful, she said, or their imagination might âtake them places that might end up being worse than what the actual truth is.â
The first of many conversations about a serious illness
Talking about a serious illness with a child is unique to each family and medical situation.
Experts say the conversation can start around a childâs observation of the situation â for example, if a parent or another adult in their life has been going to see the doctor more than usual, or if the person has been noticeably sick.
Begin the conversation with what they know by asking such things as, âRemember when this happened?â or âDid you notice this person wasnât feeling well?â
After the child responds with their observation, the adult can then go into explaining whatâs happening. (More on how to do that below.)
This is also a good time to reassure the child that what is happening is not their fault, Schneider said.
âSmall children are very egocentric, they usually experience emotions that their parents have as having something to do with them,â she said.
Parents should understand that one conversation about the situation wonât suffice.
The child will let you know when theyâre ready for more information. Experts say that when children ask questions spontaneously, later in the day or on another day, that means theyâre ready to hear more.
Young children tend to ask the same question over and over, which tells the adult they want to learn more about the situation, Ingman said. This is a good framework for giving information incrementally through a series of conversations.
âIt just helps reassure them that the adults in their life are trustworthy,â Ingman said, because the adults are informing them.
If a child doesnât ask questions, the parent or guardian should check in with them or offer another trusted adult whoâs available to talk.
During the conversation
Itâs OK to be open and honest about whatâs happening and how it can affect the entire family.
Part of that honesty includes using actual medical terms like cancer or chemotherapy. Ingman said the terms are scarier to adults than to children because kids donât have a grasp of their meaning yet.
Itâs an opportunity to explain the terms to them so they are prepared for how the illness will affect their loved one. Using a term also demystifies it and gets them comfortable hearing it.
Experts discourage guardians from using euphemisms or vague statements like âMom is sick,â because it could confuse the child.
For example, if a childâs family member died from complications of a serious but unspecified illness, they might think another person with an unspecified illness could have the same outcome.
âItâs actually scarier for kids to hear âsickâ because then theyâre going to hear other people are âsickâ and theyâre going to think that those people are going to die,â Schneider said.
By using the right terms, the parent can talk about how treatment is different for everyone or how an early diagnosis can be different from a late one.
For young children, the first explanation will be short and simple.
Pay attention to how the child is responding to the conversation, Ingman said. They might be emotional if itâs very difficult news, and thatâs normal. Thereâs no formula for how to conduct this conversation and no guarantees about how it will go, so itâs customary to take breaks and to allow time for follow-up questions.
A part of the conversation is how the illness will affect the whole family, which includes telling the child how this might change their routine.
Let the child know if a different family member will pick them up from school, or if a relative will stay with them at night should the adult need to go to the hospital. Telling them about these changes but working to keep as much of their routine going is reassuring to them, Ingman said.
Signs of distress
A childâs reactions to this conversation can run the gamut because each child is unique. Itâs normal for a child to not react, just as itâs normal to be very distressed.
It becomes a concern when the child has prolonged signs of distress that donât go away. These include getting worse grades at school, being withdrawn or not being able to engage in activities the child typically enjoyed.
Other signs, Schneider said, include not wanting to be separated from the adult whoâs sick, not sleeping independently or not wanting to go to school.
In this scenario, Schneider advises guardians to ask the child whatâs causing them to act this way, whatâs worrying them or whatâs bothering them, because the adult and child can then talk about it.
âTheir behavior is their way of showing their pain, and thatâs something that parents need to remember because [children] canât come right out and say it,â she said.
Get the child involved
Along with being brought into a conversation thatâs appropriate for their age, children can also be given a hands-on role.
Ingman said giving the child tasks such as drawing a picture, taking a photo or writing a note for the ill family member gives them some sense of agency in the situation.
What happens if the illness becomes terminal
Itâs extremely important that kids have an opportunity to prepare if a parent or sibling is not going to survive, because the family can collectively make choices about how to spend those final days and how to say goodbye, Schneider said.
âIf theyâre not given the information,â she said, âthe fear of the unknown is much worse for them.â
When Kate Middleton announced her recent cancer diagnosis, she emphasized the time she and her husband, William, Prince of Wales, took to share the news with their three children.
Talking to pre-adolescent children about serious illnesses is the right course of action for any family because children can sense change, said Kathleen Ingman, a pediatric psychologist at the Cancer and Blood Institute at Childrenâs Hospital Los Angeles.
âKeeping information from them, even from young children, can often lead to anxiety because they know something is happening but donât know what it is,â Ingman said.
In a video announcement, the Princess of Wales said that the undisclosed form of cancer was detected after she underwent a âmajor abdominal surgeryâ in London at the beginning of the year. She is currently undergoing chemotherapy.
The 42-year-old said itâs taken time to recover from surgery, undergo treatment, and explain her medical situation to her three children â Princes George, 10, and Louis, 5, and Princess Charlotte, 8 â âin a way thatâs appropriate for them and to reassure them that Iâm going to be OK.â
Ingman and Lauren Schneider, clinical director of child and adolescent programs for grief support center Our House, spoke to The Times about how to talk to young children about serious illness and its effect on the whole family.
As their first piece of advice, they encourage families to make kids a part of the discussion right away because children are very sensitive to minute changes in their environment, Schneider said.
âIt prevents [the information] from growing into a big piece of news that then feels like a scary thing to drop all at once after a delay,â Ingman said.
A lack of information can also lead the child to be fearful, she said, or their imagination might âtake them places that might end up being worse than what the actual truth is.â
The first of many conversations about a serious illness
Talking about a serious illness with a child is unique to each family and medical situation.
Experts say the conversation can start around a childâs observation of the situation â for example, if a parent or another adult in their life has been going to see the doctor more than usual, or if the person has been noticeably sick.
Begin the conversation with what they know by asking such things as, âRemember when this happened?â or âDid you notice this person wasnât feeling well?â
After the child responds with their observation, the adult can then go into explaining whatâs happening. (More on how to do that below.)
This is also a good time to reassure the child that what is happening is not their fault, Schneider said.
âSmall children are very egocentric, they usually experience emotions that their parents have as having something to do with them,â she said.
Parents should understand that one conversation about the situation wonât suffice.
The child will let you know when theyâre ready for more information. Experts say that when children ask questions spontaneously, later in the day or on another day, that means theyâre ready to hear more.
Young children tend to ask the same question over and over, which tells the adult they want to learn more about the situation, Ingman said. This is a good framework for giving information incrementally through a series of conversations.
âIt just helps reassure them that the adults in their life are trustworthy,â Ingman said, because the adults are informing them.
If a child doesnât ask questions, the parent or guardian should check in with them or offer another trusted adult whoâs available to talk.
During the conversation
Itâs OK to be open and honest about whatâs happening and how it can affect the entire family.
Part of that honesty includes using actual medical terms like cancer or chemotherapy. Ingman said the terms are scarier to adults than to children because kids donât have a grasp of their meaning yet.
Itâs an opportunity to explain the terms to them so they are prepared for how the illness will affect their loved one. Using a term also demystifies it and gets them comfortable hearing it.
Experts discourage guardians from using euphemisms or vague statements like âMom is sick,â because it could confuse the child.
For example, if a childâs family member died from complications of a serious but unspecified illness, they might think another person with an unspecified illness could have the same outcome.
âItâs actually scarier for kids to hear âsickâ because then theyâre going to hear other people are âsickâ and theyâre going to think that those people are going to die,â Schneider said.
By using the right terms, the parent can talk about how treatment is different for everyone or how an early diagnosis can be different from a late one.
For young children, the first explanation will be short and simple.
Pay attention to how the child is responding to the conversation, Ingman said. They might be emotional if itâs very difficult news, and thatâs normal. Thereâs no formula for how to conduct this conversation and no guarantees about how it will go, so itâs customary to take breaks and to allow time for follow-up questions.
A part of the conversation is how the illness will affect the whole family, which includes telling the child how this might change their routine.
Let the child know if a different family member will pick them up from school, or if a relative will stay with them at night should the adult need to go to the hospital. Telling them about these changes but working to keep as much of their routine going is reassuring to them, Ingman said.
Signs of distress
A childâs reactions to this conversation can run the gamut because each child is unique. Itâs normal for a child to not react, just as itâs normal to be very distressed.
It becomes a concern when the child has prolonged signs of distress that donât go away. These include getting worse grades at school, being withdrawn or not being able to engage in activities the child typically enjoyed.
Other signs, Schneider said, include not wanting to be separated from the adult whoâs sick, not sleeping independently or not wanting to go to school.
In this scenario, Schneider advises guardians to ask the child whatâs causing them to act this way, whatâs worrying them or whatâs bothering them, because the adult and child can then talk about it.
âTheir behavior is their way of showing their pain, and thatâs something that parents need to remember because [children] canât come right out and say it,â she said.
Get the child involved
Along with being brought into a conversation thatâs appropriate for their age, children can also be given a hands-on role.
Ingman said giving the child tasks such as drawing a picture, taking a photo or writing a note for the ill family member gives them some sense of agency in the situation.
What happens if the illness becomes terminal
Itâs extremely important that kids have an opportunity to prepare if a parent or sibling is not going to survive, because the family can collectively make choices about how to spend those final days and how to say goodbye, Schneider said.
âIf theyâre not given the information,â she said, âthe fear of the unknown is much worse for them.â
