Johns Hopkins experts offer suggestions to address challenges of online learning for children with cancer

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Thousands of schools transitioned to online learning in 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic, during which time many children with cancer and other chronic health needs, as well as those with special education needs, faced significant challenges to learning online. An opinion paper by Johns Hopkins experts, published Jan. 4 in the journal JAMA Pediatrics, highlights some of the issues faced by families and offers suggestions to move forward.

Children undergoing cancer treatment may have symptoms such as fatigue, pain, motor impairments or vision/hearing loss that make learning more challenging, says co-author Kathy Ruble, Ph.D., M.S.N., R.N., C.R.N.P., director of the pediatric oncology survivorship clinic at the Johns Hopkins Kimmel Cancer Center and an associate professor at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine and School of Nursing. Additionally, therapy frequently induces deficits in attention, executive function, processing speed, behavior regulation and overall IQ.

Although clinicians in pediatric oncology or other subspecialties are the ones who spend the most time with families, they're often the least well-equipped to handle these types of issues, Ruble says.

If somebody is having difficulty walking, we don't have any problem sending them to physical therapy. But if someone can't hold their pen, or employ fine motor skills to use the computer, we're much less likely to pick that up in a clinical visit and send them to occupational therapy. There are many departments within the health care system that can help with disease-acquired or treatment-acquired disabilities that I think we underutilize because we don't think about it enough."

Kathy Ruble, Ph.D., M.S.N., R.N., C.R.N.P., director of the pediatric oncology survivorship clinic, Johns Hopkins Kimmel Cancer Center and associate professor, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine and School of Nursing

Patients and family caregivers should bring up concerns to every clinician they encounter and ask for assistance, she advises. Meanwhile, she says, during examinations clinicians should ask about school performance, look for signs and symptoms that might make learning challenging, and learn what resources are available within their institutions or communities. Pediatric neuropsychology teams, social workers and disease-specific organizations may also be helpful.

In addition, Ruble and her team developed a continuing medical education course to help oncology health care providers navigate the challenges associated with the neurocognitive impacts of therapy. It is available as a Massive Open Online Course (MOOC), free online courses open to anyone, on the Coursera platform Kids with Cancer Still Need School: The Providers Role.

Source:
Journal reference:

Thornton, C.P., et al. (2022) Education for Children With Chronic Illness Moving Forward in Online and Virtual Learning. JAMA Pediatrics. doi.org/10.1001/jamapediatrics.2021.5643.

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