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. 2022 May 4;37(12):3019–3029. doi: 10.1007/s00467-022-05559-5

Table 1.

Summary of publications selected for review

Authors/Year Country Design/measures Participants Health status Sibling ages Main findings
Agerskov et al. 2019 [17] Denmark Qualitative: semi-structured individual interviews 7 mothers and fathers, 5 siblings and 5 patients CKD stages 4 or 5 6–13 years 2 main themes: (1) the significance of dealing with the disease in everyday life and (2) the disease leaves a number of marks
Agerskov et al. 2020 [18] Denmark Qualitative: semi-structured individual interviews 7 mothers and fathers, 5 siblings and 5 patients CKD stages 4 or 5 6–18 years Felt alone, worried, and neglected; monitored, worried about and felt empathy for sibling including special ties and togetherness with sibling
Agerskov et al. 2021 [19] Denmark Qualitative: semi-structured individual interviews 7 siblings CKD stages 4 or 5/post-transplant 7–13 years 3 main themes: (1) illness in the background, (2) concerned for and taking care of sibling, (3) importance of bonds with relatives or adults
Altschuler et al. 1991 [15] UK Qualitative: semi-structured individual interviews 6 families CKD Unknown Parents reported neglect of siblings
Batte et al. 2006 [4] UK Mixed: semi-structured individual interviews and SCASa 15 siblings CKD/post-transplant 8–12 years No differences in comparisons between siblings and norms on anxiety scale. Expressed concerns about separation from parents & patient health; felt protective toward patient & need to be more grown up
Fielding et al. 1985 [13] UK Quantitative: School behavior problems reported by teachers 15 siblings CKD/post-transplant Unknown No differences in comparisons between siblings and patients or age matched school control group
Karabudak et al. 16 Turkey Qualitative: semi-structured individual interview 10 siblings CKD stages 4 or 5 12–19 years Main themes included: (1) Information and opinions, (2) Changes, including emotional responses, and (3) Solutions
Velasco et al. 14 Argentina

Quantitative:

KIDSCREEN-52b

50 siblings Post-transplant 8–18 years Siblings reported lower physical well-being, financial resources, parent relations/home life and autonomy than controls

aSpence Children’s Anxiety Scale; bHealth-related quality of life measure