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Dive into the research topics where Madelaine C. Keim is active.

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Featured researches published by Madelaine C. Keim.


Neuropsychology (journal) | 2016

Adaptive functioning following pediatric traumatic brain injury: Relationship to executive function and processing speed.

Emily L. Shultz; Kristen R. Hoskinson; Madelaine C. Keim; Maureen Dennis; H. Gerry Taylor; Erin D. Bigler; Kenneth H. Rubin; Kathryn Vannatta; Cynthia A. Gerhardt; Terry Stancin; Keith Owen Yeates

OBJECTIVE Pediatric traumatic brain injury (TBI) may affect childrens ability to perform everyday tasks (i.e., adaptive functioning). Guided by the American Association for Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities (AAIDD) model, we explored the association between TBI and adaptive functioning at increasing levels of specificity (global, AAIDD domains, and subscales). We also examined the contributions of executive function and processing speed as mediators of TBIs effects on adaptive functioning. METHOD Children (ages 8-13) with severe TBI (STBI; n = 19), mild-moderate TBI (MTBI; n = 50), or orthopedic injury (OI; n = 60) completed measures of executive function (TEA-Ch) and processing speed (WISC-IV) an average of 2.7 years postinjury (SD = 1.2; range: 1-5.3). Parents rated childrens adaptive functioning (ABAS-II, BASC-2, CASP). RESULTS STBI had lower global adaptive functioning (η2 = .04-.08) than the MTBI and OI groups, which typically did not differ. Deficits in the STBI group were particularly evident in the social domain, with specific deficits in social participation, leisure, and social adjustment (η2 = .06-.09). Jointly, executive function and processing speed were mediators of STBIs effects on global adaptive functioning and in conceptual and social domains. In the STBI group, executive function mediated social functioning, and processing speed mediated social participation. CONCLUSIONS Children with STBI experience deficits in adaptive functioning, particularly in social adjustment, with less pronounced deficits in conceptual and practical skills. Executive function and processing speed may mediate the effects of STBI on adaptive functioning. Targeting adaptive functioning and associated cognitive deficits for intervention may enhance quality of life for pediatric TBI survivors. (PsycINFO Database Record


Cancer | 2017

Psychosexual development and satisfaction in long-term survivors of childhood cancer: Neurotoxic treatment intensity as a risk indicator

Vicky Lehmann; Marrit A. Tuinman; Madelaine C. Keim; Adrien M. Winning; Randal Olshefski; Rajinder Bajwa; Mariët Hagedoorn; Cynthia A. Gerhardt

Risk factors for impairment in psychosexual development and satisfaction among adult survivors of childhood cancer are poorly understood. The authors compared psychosexual outcomes between survivors and healthy controls, and tested whether at‐risk survivors can be identified by 1) treatment neurotoxicity or 2) diagnosis.


Journal of Pediatric Psychology | 2017

Parent–Child Communication and Adjustment Among Children With Advanced and Non-Advanced Cancer in the First Year Following Diagnosis or Relapse

Madelaine C. Keim; Vicky Lehmann; Emily L. Shultz; Adrien M. Winning; Joseph Rausch; Maru Barrera; Mary Jo Gilmer; Lexa K. Murphy; Kathryn Vannatta; Bruce E. Compas; Cynthia A. Gerhardt

Objectives To examine parent-child communication (i.e., openness, problems) and child adjustment among youth with advanced or non-advanced cancer and comparison children. Methods Families (n = 125) were recruited after a childs diagnosis/relapse and stratified by advanced (n = 55) or non-advanced (n = 70) disease. Comparison children (n = 60) were recruited from local schools. Children (ages 10-17) reported on communication (Parent-Adolescent Communication Scale) with both parents, while mothers reported on child adjustment (Child Behavior Checklist) at enrollment (T1) and one year (T2). Results Openness/problems in communication did not differ across groups at T1, but problems with fathers were higher among children with non-advanced cancer versus comparisons at T2. Openness declined for all fathers, while changes in problems varied by group for both parents. T1 communication predicted later adjustment only for children with advanced cancer. Conclusions Communication plays an important role, particularly for children with advanced cancer. Additional research with families affected by life-limiting conditions is needed.


School Psychology Quarterly | 2018

Grief and growth in bereaved siblings: Interactions between different sources of social support.

Katianne M. Howard Sharp; Claire Russell; Madelaine C. Keim; Maru Barrera; Mary Jo Gilmer; Terrah Foster Akard; Bruce E. Compas; Diane L. Fairclough; Betty Davies; Nancy S. Hogan; Tammi Young-Saleme; Kathryn Vannatta; Cynthia A. Gerhardt

The objective was to characterize the relation between different sources of school-based social support (friends, peers, and teachers) and bereaved siblings’ grief and grief-related growth and to examine whether nonparental sources of social support buffer the effects of low parent support on bereaved siblings. Families (N = 85) were recruited from cancer registries at 3 pediatric institutions 3–12 months after a child’s death. Bereaved siblings were 8–18 years old (M = 12.39, SD = 2.65) and majority female (58%) and White (74%). During home visits, siblings reported their perceptions of social support from parental and nonparental sources using the Social Support Scale for Children, as well as grief and grief-related growth using the Hogan Sibling Inventory of Bereavement. Parent, friend, and teacher support were positively correlated with grief-related growth, whereas parent and peer support were negatively correlated with grief for adolescents. Teacher and friend support significantly moderated the association between parent support and grief such that teacher and friend support accentuated the positive effects of parent support. Friend and peer support moderated associations between parent support and grief/growth for adolescents but not children. School-based social support, namely from friends, peers, and teachers, appears to facilitate the adjustment of bereaved siblings. Findings suggest that bereaved siblings may benefit from enhanced support from teachers and friends regardless of age, with middle/high school students particularly benefitting from increased support from close friends and peers.


Journal of Pediatric Psychology | 2018

Patterns of Spillover Between Marital Adjustment and Parent–Child Conflict During Pediatric Cancer Treatment

Kaitlyn Fladeboe; Kyrill Gurtovenko; Madelaine C. Keim; Joy Kawamura; Kevin M. King; Debra L. Friedman; Bruce E. Compas; David Breiger; Liliana J. Lengua; Lynn Fainsilber Katz

Objective When a child is diagnosed with cancer, problems may arise in family relationships and negatively affect child adjustment. The current study examined patterns of spillover between marital and parent-child relationships to identify targets for intervention aimed at ameliorating family conflict. Method Families (N = 117) were recruited from two US childrens hospitals within 2-week postdiagnosis to participate in a short-term prospective longitudinal study. Children with cancer were 2-10 years old (M = 5.42 years, SD = 2.59). Primary caregivers provided reports of marital and parent-child conflict at 1-, 6-, and 12-month postdiagnosis. Results Results indicated that a unidirectional model of spillover from the marital to the parent-child relationship best explained the data. In terms of specific temporal patterns, lower marital adjustment soon after diagnosis was associated with an increase in parent-child conflict 6 months later, though this pattern was not repeated in the latter 6 months of treatment. Conclusion Targeting problems in marital relationships soon after diagnosis may prevent conflict from developing in the parent-child relationship.


Journal of Family Psychology | 2018

Longitudinal associations among maternal depressive symptoms, child emotional caretaking, and anxious/depressed symptoms in pediatric cancer.

Kemar V. Prussien; Lexa K. Murphy; Cynthia A. Gerhardt; Kathryn Vannatta; Heather Bemis; Leandra Desjardins; Amanda C. Ferrante; Emily L. Shultz; Madelaine C. Keim; David A. Cole; Bruce E. Compas

Research has shown that children experience increased emotional distress when engaging in emotional caretaking of a parent. The current study is the first to examine this process in families in which the source of the stress is the child’s illness. Prospective associations were tested among mothers’ depressive symptoms near the time of their child’s cancer diagnosis, mothers’ expressed distress and their child’s emotional caretaking during an interaction task, and child anxious/depressed symptoms at 1 year postdiagnosis. Families (N = 78) were recruited from two pediatric hospitals soon after their child’s (Ages 5–18) new diagnosis or relapse of cancer. Mothers reported on their own depressive symptoms and their child’s anxious/depressed symptoms near the time of diagnosis or recurrence (Time 1) and 1 year later (Time 3). At Time 2 (4 months after Time 1), mother–child dyads completed a video-recorded discussion of their experience with cancer that was coded for observed maternal expressed distress (anxiety, sadness) and observed child emotional caretaking. Maternal expressed distress during the interaction was significantly related to more emotional caretaking behaviors by both boys and girls. Results of a moderated mediation model showed that child emotional caretaking at Time 2 significantly mediated the relation between maternal depressive symptoms at Time 1 and child anxious/depressed symptoms at Time 3 for girls but not for boys. The findings suggest that children’s emotional caretaking behaviors contribute to subsequent anxious/depressed symptoms for girls, but not for boys, with cancer.


Pediatric Blood & Cancer | 2017

Family estimates of risk for neurocognitive late effects following pediatric cancer: From diagnosis through the first three years of survivorship

Emily L. Shultz; Vicky Lehmann; Joseph Rausch; Madelaine C. Keim; Adrien M. Winning; Randal Olshefski; Kathryn Vannatta; Bruce E. Compas; Cynthia A. Gerhardt

Families often express a need for additional information about neurocognitive late effects (NCLE) after a pediatric cancer diagnosis. Therefore, we examined: (i) differences in parent, child, and oncologist estimates of risk for NCLE; (ii) whether the estimates of parents and/or children change over time; and (iii) whether estimates are different for children treated with central nervous system (CNS) directed therapies.


Journal of adolescent and young adult oncology | 2017

Am I a 6 or a 10? Mate Value Among Young Adult Survivors of Childhood Cancer and Healthy Peers: Mate Value Among Young Adult Survivors of Childhood Cancer and Healthy Peers

Vicky Lehmann; Marrit A. Tuinman; Madelaine C. Keim; Mariët Hagedoorn; Cynthia A. Gerhardt

PURPOSE This study focused on self-perceived mate value of young adult survivors of childhood cancer relative to healthy peers. Qualitative studies indicate potential problems surrounding romantic relationships among survivors, but systematic studies are missing. METHODS One-hundred forty-nine childhood cancer survivors and 149 matched controls completed online questionnaires about their mate value, social comparison strategies (i.e., upward/downward identifying/contrasting strategies), and marital status. Survivors and controls were aged 20-40 (M = 27.8), 55% were female, and survivors had been treated for brain tumors (n = 52; 35%), leukemia (n = 42; 28%), lymphoma (n = 31; 21%), or other solid tumors (n = 24; 16%) at 5-33 years before study participation. RESULTS Survivors and controls did not differ on overall mate value, but on individual characteristics: Survivors thought they had a better sense of humor (d = 0.36), were more loyal (d = 0.32), had higher social status (d = 0.26), and were more ambitious (d = 0.19), while also considering themselves less sexually adventurous (d = 0.31), less healthy (d = 0.26), having less desire to have children (d = 0.21), and a less attractive face (d = 0.20). Higher mate value was related to being partnered, more upward-identifying, less upward-contrasting, and less downward-identifying strategies. Moreover, less downward-identifying was associated with higher mate value in survivors, but not controls; whereas greater downward-contrasting was associated with higher mate value among controls only (R2 = 30.8%). CONCLUSIONS Survivors do not generally view themselves as less valuable (potential) romantic partners, but they evaluate different characteristics either more positively or more negatively. Social comparison strategies offer targetable points of interventions to intervene on negative self-evaluations, potentially enhancing well-being.Purpose: This study focused on self-perceived mate value of young adult survivors of childhood cancer relative to healthy peers. Qualitative studies indicate potential problems surrounding romantic relationships among survivors, but systematic studies are missing. Methods: One-hundred forty-nine childhood cancer survivors and 149 matched controls completed online questionnaires about their mate value, social comparison strategies (i.e., upward/downward identifying/contrasting strategies), and marital status. Survivors and controls were aged 20–40 (M = 27.8), 55% were female, and survivors had been treated for brain tumors (n = 52; 35%), leukemia (n = 42; 28%), lymphoma (n = 31; 21%), or other solid tumors (n = 24; 16%) at 5–33 years before study participation. Results: Survivors and controls did not differ on overall mate value, but on individual characteristics: Survivors thought they had a better sense of humor (d = 0.36), were more loyal (d = 0.32), had higher social status (d = 0.26), and were more am...


Journal of Obstetric, Gynecologic, & Neonatal Nursing | 2017

Parent Distress and the Decision to Have Another Child After an Infant's Death in the NICU

Madelaine C. Keim; Christine A. Fortney; Emily L. Shultz; Adrien M. Winning; Cynthia A. Gerhardt; Amy E. Baughcum

Objective: To examine associations among parent perceptions of infant symptoms/suffering, parent distress, and decision making about having additional children after an infants death in the NICU. Design: Mixed‐methods pilot study incorporating mailed surveys and qualitative interviews. Setting: Midwestern Level IV regional referral NICU. Participants: Participants were 42 mothers and 27 fathers whose infants died in the NICU. Methods: Parents reported on infant symptoms/suffering at end of life and their own grief and posttraumatic stress symptoms. Qualitative interviews explored decision making about having additional children. Results: Approximately two thirds of bereaved parents had another child after their infants death (62% of mothers, 67% of fathers). Mothers who had another child reported fewer infant symptoms at end of life compared with mothers who did not (p = .002, d = 1.28). Although few mothers exceeded clinical levels of prolonged grief (3%) and posttraumatic stress symptoms (18%), mothers who had another child endorsed fewer symptoms of prolonged grief (p = .001, d = 1.63) and posttraumatic stress (p = .009, d = 1.16). Differences between fathers mirrored these effects but were not significant. Parent interviews generated themes related to decision making about having additional children, including Impact of Infant Death, Facilitators and Barriers, Timing and Trajectories of Decisions, and Not Wanting to Replace the Deceased Child. Conclusion: Having another child after infant loss may promote resilience or serve as an indicator of positive adjustment among parents bereaved by infant death in the NICU. Prospective research is necessary to distinguish directional associations and guide evidence‐based care.


Clinical practice in pediatric psychology | 2017

Perspectives from bereaved parents on improving end of life care in the NICU.

Amy E. Baughcum; Christine A. Fortney; Adrien M. Winning; Emily L. Shultz; Madelaine C. Keim; Lisa M. Humphrey; Amy B. Schlegel; Cynthia A. Gerhardt

Although improving end-of-life (EOL) care for children and their families is a national priority (American Academy of Pediatrics, Committee on Bioethics and Committee on Hospital Care, 2000; Institute of Medicine, 2003), research in the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) is limited. To improve care, there is a critical need to understand the experiences of these infants and their caregivers. Therefore, we conducted a retrospective study to examine parent perceptions of their infants’ care at EOL in the NICU between 3 months and 5 years of their infant’s death (M = 38.10 months, SD = 16.87). As part of this pilot study, 29 mothers and 16 fathers representing 31 infants participated in qualitative interviews assessing parents’ satisfaction with their involvement in their infants’ care and decision-making and their advice to NICU providers. Four themes emerged from interview data, including parents as partners in care, communication with the health-care team, relationships with staff, and bereavement support. Both mothers and fathers generally felt positive about their role in treatment decisions, relationships with staff, and memory-making activities. Parents noted areas for improvement, including team communication, anticipatory guidance, family inclusion at bedside, and bereavement care. This study provides a deeper understanding of parents’ experience with their infants at EOL and highlights opportunities for enhancing care. Pediatric psychologists can play an important role in facilitating communication between parents and the health-care team as well as providing bereavement support for these vulnerable families.

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Emily L. Shultz

The Research Institute at Nationwide Children's Hospital

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Vicky Lehmann

The Research Institute at Nationwide Children's Hospital

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Adrien M. Winning

The Research Institute at Nationwide Children's Hospital

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Kathryn Vannatta

The Research Institute at Nationwide Children's Hospital

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Marrit A. Tuinman

University Medical Center Groningen

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Amy E. Baughcum

Nationwide Children's Hospital

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Randal Olshefski

Nationwide Children's Hospital

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