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What is different about living alone with cancer in older age? A qualitative study of experiences and preferences for care

What is different about living alone with cancer in older age? A qualitative study of experiences and preferences for care
What is different about living alone with cancer in older age? A qualitative study of experiences and preferences for care
Background: increasing numbers of older patients with advanced cancer live alone but there is little research on how well health services meet their needs. The aim of this study was to compare the experiences and future preferences for care between two groups of older people with cancer in their last year of life; those who live alone, and those who live with co-resident carers.

Methods: in-depth qualitative interviews were conducted with 32 people aged between 70 and 95 years who were living with cancer. They were recruited from general practices and hospice day care, when the responsible health professional answered no to the question, of whether they would be surprised if the patient died within twelve months. Twenty participants lived alone. Interviews were recorded and transcribed and the data analysed using a Framework approach, focussing on the differences and commonalities between the two groups.

Results: many experiences were common to all participants, but had broader consequences for people who lived alone. Five themes are presented from the data: a perception that it is a disadvantage to live alone as a patient, the importance of relational continuity with health professionals, informal appraisal of care, place of care and future plans. People who lived alone perceived emotional and practical barriers to accessing care, and many shared an anxiety that they would have to move into a care home. Participants were concerned with remaining life, and all who lived alone had made plans for death but not for dying. Uncertainty of timescales and a desire to wait until they knew that death was imminent were some of the reasons given for not planning for future care needs.

Conclusions: older people who live alone with cancer have emotional and practical concerns that are overlooked by their professional carers. Discussion and planning for the future, along with continuity in primary care may hold the key to enhancing end-of-life care for this group of patients
1471-2296
22
Hanratty, Barbara
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Addington-Hall, Julia
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Arthur, Antony
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Cooper, Lucy
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Grande, Gunn
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Payne, Sheila
d7c97f41-ec69-4157-9339-ca07c521fbcc
Seymour, Jane
b001b1f3-1ac4-495d-837f-10ca5154b5af
Hanratty, Barbara
b2aa3cd0-a1e2-485c-a60c-e735ffb5035d
Addington-Hall, Julia
87560cc4-7562-4f9b-b908-81f3b603fdd8
Arthur, Antony
90ae53fb-349a-445a-8527-a3bba857a2d7
Cooper, Lucy
bf92ca8d-1759-49a1-82b4-697599450d2a
Grande, Gunn
7335911a-ee7f-44cd-924e-c8b3c903fe6c
Payne, Sheila
d7c97f41-ec69-4157-9339-ca07c521fbcc
Seymour, Jane
b001b1f3-1ac4-495d-837f-10ca5154b5af

Hanratty, Barbara, Addington-Hall, Julia, Arthur, Antony, Cooper, Lucy, Grande, Gunn, Payne, Sheila and Seymour, Jane (2013) What is different about living alone with cancer in older age? A qualitative study of experiences and preferences for care. BMC Family Practice, 14 (1), 22. (doi:10.1186/1471-2296-14-22).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: increasing numbers of older patients with advanced cancer live alone but there is little research on how well health services meet their needs. The aim of this study was to compare the experiences and future preferences for care between two groups of older people with cancer in their last year of life; those who live alone, and those who live with co-resident carers.

Methods: in-depth qualitative interviews were conducted with 32 people aged between 70 and 95 years who were living with cancer. They were recruited from general practices and hospice day care, when the responsible health professional answered no to the question, of whether they would be surprised if the patient died within twelve months. Twenty participants lived alone. Interviews were recorded and transcribed and the data analysed using a Framework approach, focussing on the differences and commonalities between the two groups.

Results: many experiences were common to all participants, but had broader consequences for people who lived alone. Five themes are presented from the data: a perception that it is a disadvantage to live alone as a patient, the importance of relational continuity with health professionals, informal appraisal of care, place of care and future plans. People who lived alone perceived emotional and practical barriers to accessing care, and many shared an anxiety that they would have to move into a care home. Participants were concerned with remaining life, and all who lived alone had made plans for death but not for dying. Uncertainty of timescales and a desire to wait until they knew that death was imminent were some of the reasons given for not planning for future care needs.

Conclusions: older people who live alone with cancer have emotional and practical concerns that are overlooked by their professional carers. Discussion and planning for the future, along with continuity in primary care may hold the key to enhancing end-of-life care for this group of patients

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Published date: 2013
Organisations: Faculty of Health Sciences

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 362963
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/362963
ISSN: 1471-2296
PURE UUID: 846c2d6f-3381-4620-8da4-e45f632e92c4

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Date deposited: 17 Mar 2014 12:34
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 16:16

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Contributors

Author: Barbara Hanratty
Author: Antony Arthur
Author: Lucy Cooper
Author: Gunn Grande
Author: Sheila Payne
Author: Jane Seymour

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