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Informal carers' experiences and needs when supporting patients through chemotherapy: a mixed method study

Informal carers' experiences and needs when supporting patients through chemotherapy: a mixed method study
Informal carers' experiences and needs when supporting patients through chemotherapy: a mixed method study
Informal carers provide important emotional support to patients having chemotherapy and assistance in monitoring and managing side-effects. If they are inadequately supported in this, patient and carer morbidity may result. This study explored needs of informal carers supporting patients with cancer having chemotherapy. The study used a mixed methods approach. Carers of colorectal or lymphoma cancer patients at one comprehensive cancer centre participated. Questionnaire data informed semi-structured interviews conducted with a subsample of respondents. Interviews were analysed using Framework analysis. Questionnaire data were analysed descriptively. Fifty-nine informal carers were invited to participate; 48 returned the questionnaire (response rate 81%) and 13 were interviewed. Informal carers' needs for information about chemotherapy and its side-effects were largely met although a third felt completely or somewhat unprepared to deal with particular symptoms experienced by patients at home. Many carers had unmet needs regarding financial support and their own needs as carers. Assertiveness was important to many caring roles, but it appeared difficult for informal carers to adopt when they were unsupported in this and their role was unrecognised by health professionals. Future research should develop interventions to systematically prepare carers for their carer role, improve carer involvement and ultimately improve patient outcomes.
cancer, oncology, carers, information, mixed methods, supportive care.
0961-5423
Ream, E.
8f79582d-e1c0-4cc9-ae71-14b543567d63
Pedersen, V.H.
743cb918-fab5-4319-8c39-991aca464cae
Oakley, C.
bee35947-24a0-48ba-8357-f67596c6d661
Richardson, A.
3db30680-aa47-43a5-b54d-62d10ece17b7
Taylor, C.
f82de9c5-af37-4ca9-ab5b-261aed735756
Verity, R.
d5607ef4-844a-47ed-818a-2d798de20069
Ream, E.
8f79582d-e1c0-4cc9-ae71-14b543567d63
Pedersen, V.H.
743cb918-fab5-4319-8c39-991aca464cae
Oakley, C.
bee35947-24a0-48ba-8357-f67596c6d661
Richardson, A.
3db30680-aa47-43a5-b54d-62d10ece17b7
Taylor, C.
f82de9c5-af37-4ca9-ab5b-261aed735756
Verity, R.
d5607ef4-844a-47ed-818a-2d798de20069

Ream, E., Pedersen, V.H., Oakley, C., Richardson, A., Taylor, C. and Verity, R. (2013) Informal carers' experiences and needs when supporting patients through chemotherapy: a mixed method study. European Journal of Cancer Care. (doi:10.1111/ecc.12083). (PMID:23834290)

Record type: Article

Abstract

Informal carers provide important emotional support to patients having chemotherapy and assistance in monitoring and managing side-effects. If they are inadequately supported in this, patient and carer morbidity may result. This study explored needs of informal carers supporting patients with cancer having chemotherapy. The study used a mixed methods approach. Carers of colorectal or lymphoma cancer patients at one comprehensive cancer centre participated. Questionnaire data informed semi-structured interviews conducted with a subsample of respondents. Interviews were analysed using Framework analysis. Questionnaire data were analysed descriptively. Fifty-nine informal carers were invited to participate; 48 returned the questionnaire (response rate 81%) and 13 were interviewed. Informal carers' needs for information about chemotherapy and its side-effects were largely met although a third felt completely or somewhat unprepared to deal with particular symptoms experienced by patients at home. Many carers had unmet needs regarding financial support and their own needs as carers. Assertiveness was important to many caring roles, but it appeared difficult for informal carers to adopt when they were unsupported in this and their role was unrecognised by health professionals. Future research should develop interventions to systematically prepare carers for their carer role, improve carer involvement and ultimately improve patient outcomes.

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More information

e-pub ahead of print date: 8 July 2013
Keywords: cancer, oncology, carers, information, mixed methods, supportive care.
Organisations: Faculty of Health Sciences

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 357134
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/357134
ISSN: 0961-5423
PURE UUID: 9e39ca4a-b67d-4c90-8027-9a08d293fcc7
ORCID for A. Richardson: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-3127-5755

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Date deposited: 03 Oct 2013 09:23
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:34

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Contributors

Author: E. Ream
Author: V.H. Pedersen
Author: C. Oakley
Author: A. Richardson ORCID iD
Author: C. Taylor
Author: R. Verity

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