Families experiencing breast cancer experience difficult changes in their lives. There are many role changes in this difficult time. In most cases, the child will take on the role of child rearing, the parent will take on the role of the child and become a member of the poor or dependent family. The work normally done by parents (cooking, cleaning, washing) is not completed at all by anyone other than a direct family member or by a child. All families such as each patient are independent units with handling difficulties that can lead to their own lifestyles and dysfunction (Harpham, 2001).
Everyone has similarities. In other words, everyone is exposed to the family life cycle at some point in their lives. In this article we will focus on the nine-stage version of the family lifecycle. People can grow in society, adapt and find their own niches. Without the family life cycle, such lifestyles can not be realized. This will be the background of this article, starting with two people, because it gives up love, compromise, marriage, childbirth, child rearing, youth rebellion, and the foundation of children and old age all.
The life cycle model includes stages of non-traditional family life cycles such as living together, living apart, living apart, and closing. Although it may be difficult to combine these stages into a prescriptive process, they are common places in modern life and can not be ignored. Living is a curse of a formal Christian doctrine, and we find that it greatly reduces the possibilities of members of the Church. The age and sex of living together effect are not so different, but the destruction of cohabitants will have different effects for men and women. In addition, these differences depend on the age of the respondents and far exceed the expectations based on previous surveys. At the age of 32, unmarried men seem to have completely avoided the influence of former living together, but unmarried women of the same age seem to continue being affected by living together even after the alliance. The effect of divorce on men and women is also very different.
There are many factors that affect family purchasing decisions. Despite the family's kind and the role of women in families, the family life cycle (FLC) also greatly affects family purchasing decisions. The family life cycle represents changes in the structure of families and families over time (Askegaard, 2006). FLC shows household income and family aging. As time goes by, family needs and needs tend to change. Therefore, their preferences and behavior will change. Households at the same stage of the life cycle have similar characteristics of demographics, finance, and purchasing. In contrast, families at various stages of life show various interests, needs, needs, and use a variety of communication strategies (Lee & Levy, 2004).