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<italic>“Never at ease” –</italic> family carers within integrated palliative care: a multinational, mixed method study.

Authors :
Ateş, Gülay
Ebenau, Anne Frederieke
Busa, Csilla
Csikos, Ágnes
Hasselaar, Jeroen
Jaspers, Birgit
Menten, Johan
Payne, Sheila
Van Beek, Karen
Varey, Sandra
Groot, Marieke
Radbruch, Lukas
Source :
BMC Palliative Care; 3/1/2018, Vol. 17, p1-1, 1p
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Background: Family carers manage a wide range of responsibilities in the lives and care of patients receiving palliative care. They fulfil multiple roles and perform activities within different settings. This has immediate consequences on family carers’ every-day lives. According to literature, family carers in palliative care are both part of the formal and informal care network, but also persons in need of support. This article aims to investigate 1) burdens and rewards associated with family caregiving and 2) what family carers find helpful in their contact with professionals from integrated palliative care initiatives (IPC-i) and other services. Methods: Family carers looking after patients with cancer, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease or chronic heart failure were purposefully recruited at 22 IPC-i in Belgium, Germany, Hungary, the Netherlands and the United Kingdom in the course of the project “Patient-centred palliative care pathways in advanced cancer and chronic disease” (InSup-C). Semi-structured interviews (&lt;italic&gt;n&lt;/italic&gt; = 156) and 87 quantitative questionnaires (CRA, POS, CANHELP Lite) were conducted with family carers. Interviews were analysed with transnationally agreed thematic codes (MAXQDA or NVivo). Statistical tests (SPSS) were carried out in accordance with the characteristic value of the items and distributions. Results: On average, quantitative data showed moderate burden, but the qualitative findings indicated that this burden might be underrated. There is some evidence that IPC-i with well-developed professional care networks and communication systems relieved family carers’ burden by direct and indirect interventions; e.g. provision of night shift nurses or psychological support. Needs of family carers were similar in all participating countries. However, in all countries IPC-i mostly offered one-off events for family carers, lacking systematic or institutionalised support structures. Conclusions: Data suggest that, most IPC-i did not pay enough attention to the needs of most family carers, and did not offer proactive care and access to supportive resources to them (e.g. training, respite care, access to resources). We recommend recognizing family carers as part of the ‘unit of care’ and partner in caregiving, to improve their knowledge about, and access to, and the support available. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1472684X
Volume :
17
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
BMC Palliative Care
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
128244448
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12904-018-0291-7