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Cancer carers medicines management: a feasibility trial of an educational intervention for managing end of life pain medication

Cancer carers medicines management: a feasibility trial of an educational intervention for managing end of life pain medication
Cancer carers medicines management: a feasibility trial of an educational intervention for managing end of life pain medication
Introduction: a majority of people with advanced cancer will experience pain and family carers play an important role in managing pain medication at home. There is evidence carers need support with this, yet no research in the UK has developed and tested theory-driven interventions to help them manage pain medicines. We are conducting a Phase I-II feasibility study (MRC 2008) to develop a new intervention: Cancer Carer Medicines Management (CCMM).

Aim(s) and method(s): to summarise Phase I, outlining the process of CCMM development. A staged multi-method approach was used to obtain current evidence to inform CCMM's development: a systematic literature review of interventions for carer end of life medicines management; a scoping of practice and theoretical contexts; interviews and user involvement group consultations with patients, carers, and health professionals with palliative care experience. This informed two participatory action research workshops to design and develop an intervention. The resulting prototype intervention was then further refined through a consultative review process.

Results: this staged, collaborative approach is appropriate and successful in enabling an evidence-based, clinically applicable intervention to be developed.

Conclusion(s): the intervention development process has ensured that CCMM reaches the feasibility trial stage with a robust grounding in carer experience, clinical practice and research evidence. In turn, the intervention has the potential to enhance the nurses' practice in the community to meet carers' needs in pain medication management.
108-108
BMJ Group
Latter, S.
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Lowson, E.
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Hopkinson, Jane B.
c656f8e9-7962-4bdc-87ea-e26e12ff1d24
Hughes, Jacki
3edde8fa-ddf1-477b-b032-eee273acc0b1
Richardson, Alison
3db30680-aa47-43a5-b54d-62d10ece17b7
Duke, S.
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Anstey, Sally
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Bennett, Mike
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May, Carl
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Smith, Peter W.F.
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Latter, S.
83f100a4-95ec-4f2e-99a5-186095de2f3b
Lowson, E.
a2a98b7a-9f95-4148-888e-72979b45c4d6
Hopkinson, Jane B.
c656f8e9-7962-4bdc-87ea-e26e12ff1d24
Hughes, Jacki
3edde8fa-ddf1-477b-b032-eee273acc0b1
Richardson, Alison
3db30680-aa47-43a5-b54d-62d10ece17b7
Duke, S.
f0dc024d-f940-4f43-b5f9-adab34833ce7
Anstey, Sally
2c4a2c66-7347-490c-8a57-a7ca8623ebaf
Bennett, Mike
44253467-ad67-4de7-a661-db61ca6a7bab
May, Carl
17697f8d-98f6-40d3-9cc0-022f04009ae4
Smith, Peter W.F.
961a01a3-bf4c-43ca-9599-5be4fd5d3940

Latter, S., Lowson, E., Hopkinson, Jane B., Hughes, Jacki, Richardson, Alison, Duke, S., Anstey, Sally, Bennett, Mike, May, Carl and Smith, Peter W.F. (2014) Cancer carers medicines management: a feasibility trial of an educational intervention for managing end of life pain medication. In BMJ Supportive and Palliative Care: Abstracts of the 2014 Annual Marie Curie Research Conference 'Palliative care in the community - making a difference in practice'. BMJ Group. p. 108 . (doi:10.1136/bmjspcare-2014-000653.11).

Record type: Conference or Workshop Item (Paper)

Abstract

Introduction: a majority of people with advanced cancer will experience pain and family carers play an important role in managing pain medication at home. There is evidence carers need support with this, yet no research in the UK has developed and tested theory-driven interventions to help them manage pain medicines. We are conducting a Phase I-II feasibility study (MRC 2008) to develop a new intervention: Cancer Carer Medicines Management (CCMM).

Aim(s) and method(s): to summarise Phase I, outlining the process of CCMM development. A staged multi-method approach was used to obtain current evidence to inform CCMM's development: a systematic literature review of interventions for carer end of life medicines management; a scoping of practice and theoretical contexts; interviews and user involvement group consultations with patients, carers, and health professionals with palliative care experience. This informed two participatory action research workshops to design and develop an intervention. The resulting prototype intervention was then further refined through a consultative review process.

Results: this staged, collaborative approach is appropriate and successful in enabling an evidence-based, clinically applicable intervention to be developed.

Conclusion(s): the intervention development process has ensured that CCMM reaches the feasibility trial stage with a robust grounding in carer experience, clinical practice and research evidence. In turn, the intervention has the potential to enhance the nurses' practice in the community to meet carers' needs in pain medication management.

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More information

Published date: 2014
Venue - Dates: conference; 2014-01-01, 2014-01-01
Organisations: Faculty of Health Sciences

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 363549
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/363549
PURE UUID: 197e2901-62ae-4937-a093-daae4c4e7490
ORCID for S. Latter: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-0973-0512
ORCID for Alison Richardson: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-3127-5755
ORCID for S. Duke: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-4058-8086
ORCID for Carl May: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-0451-2690
ORCID for Peter W.F. Smith: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-4423-5410

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Date deposited: 27 Mar 2014 11:30
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:34

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Contributors

Author: S. Latter ORCID iD
Author: E. Lowson
Author: Jane B. Hopkinson
Author: Jacki Hughes
Author: S. Duke ORCID iD
Author: Sally Anstey
Author: Mike Bennett
Author: Carl May ORCID iD

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