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Home-based physical symptom management for family caregivers: systematic review and meta-analysis

Home-based physical symptom management for family caregivers: systematic review and meta-analysis
Home-based physical symptom management for family caregivers: systematic review and meta-analysis

Background: Patients with life-limiting conditions are often cared for at home by family, typically without adequate training to carry out the challenging tasks performed. This systematic review assessed the efficacy of interventions designed to help family caregivers manage pain and other symptoms in adults and children with life-limiting conditions at home. Methods: A systematic search was performed on seven databases. A narrative synthesis was conducted, along with a meta-analysis comparing outcomes in those who received an intervention to those who did not, or to preintervention scores. Results: 84 eligible studies were identified. Significant improvements in pain and fatigue in patients with cancer were found compared with patients in the control group and baseline. Caregivers of patients with cancer receiving an intervention, compared with the control group caregivers, showed significant improvements in self-efficacy and active coping and lower avoidant coping. This group also showed significant improvements in burden, self-efficacy, anxiety and depression, and decreases in avoidant coping pre- to post intervention. Patients with dementia whose caregivers received an intervention showed significantly reduced pain intensity and improvements in quality of life pre- to post intervention. Caregivers of patients with dementia showed significantly reduced distress pre- to post intervention. No beneficial effects were found for caregivers of patients with Parkinson's disease or heart failure, although only limited analyses could be performed. Conclusions: Interventions targeting family caregivers can improve both patient symptoms and caregiver outcomes, as demonstrated in cancer and dementia care. Future mixed-methods research should collect data from caregiver and patient dyads, identifying key intervention components. There is also need for more studies on caregivers of paediatric patients.

Family management, Home Care, Symptoms and symptom management
2045-435X
Schoth, Daniel E.
73f3036e-b8cb-40b2-9466-e8e0f341fdd5
Holley, Simone
29362ff2-4e74-408e-af0a-c0cfb5ef743b
Johnson, Margaret
a6a124f3-678a-4136-88e6-f67fccde7934
Stibbs, Emma L.
714c6faa-e151-45fe-92e6-c9a2fb635a08
Renton, Kate
d5e54a1b-d13e-4f6a-8ae7-3c066676b08c
Harrop, Emily
a4b29888-be35-4f76-93fc-bb0b437d54e0
Liossi, Christina
fd401ad6-581a-4a31-a60b-f8671ffd3558
Schoth, Daniel E.
73f3036e-b8cb-40b2-9466-e8e0f341fdd5
Holley, Simone
29362ff2-4e74-408e-af0a-c0cfb5ef743b
Johnson, Margaret
a6a124f3-678a-4136-88e6-f67fccde7934
Stibbs, Emma L.
714c6faa-e151-45fe-92e6-c9a2fb635a08
Renton, Kate
d5e54a1b-d13e-4f6a-8ae7-3c066676b08c
Harrop, Emily
a4b29888-be35-4f76-93fc-bb0b437d54e0
Liossi, Christina
fd401ad6-581a-4a31-a60b-f8671ffd3558

Schoth, Daniel E., Holley, Simone, Johnson, Margaret, Stibbs, Emma L., Renton, Kate, Harrop, Emily and Liossi, Christina (2025) Home-based physical symptom management for family caregivers: systematic review and meta-analysis. BMJ Supportive & Palliative Care, [spcare-2024-005246]. (doi:10.1136/spcare-2024-005246).

Record type: Review

Abstract

Background: Patients with life-limiting conditions are often cared for at home by family, typically without adequate training to carry out the challenging tasks performed. This systematic review assessed the efficacy of interventions designed to help family caregivers manage pain and other symptoms in adults and children with life-limiting conditions at home. Methods: A systematic search was performed on seven databases. A narrative synthesis was conducted, along with a meta-analysis comparing outcomes in those who received an intervention to those who did not, or to preintervention scores. Results: 84 eligible studies were identified. Significant improvements in pain and fatigue in patients with cancer were found compared with patients in the control group and baseline. Caregivers of patients with cancer receiving an intervention, compared with the control group caregivers, showed significant improvements in self-efficacy and active coping and lower avoidant coping. This group also showed significant improvements in burden, self-efficacy, anxiety and depression, and decreases in avoidant coping pre- to post intervention. Patients with dementia whose caregivers received an intervention showed significantly reduced pain intensity and improvements in quality of life pre- to post intervention. Caregivers of patients with dementia showed significantly reduced distress pre- to post intervention. No beneficial effects were found for caregivers of patients with Parkinson's disease or heart failure, although only limited analyses could be performed. Conclusions: Interventions targeting family caregivers can improve both patient symptoms and caregiver outcomes, as demonstrated in cancer and dementia care. Future mixed-methods research should collect data from caregiver and patient dyads, identifying key intervention components. There is also need for more studies on caregivers of paediatric patients.

Text
Symptom management manuscript BMJ 23-12-24 CLEAN - Accepted Manuscript
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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 3 January 2025
e-pub ahead of print date: 31 January 2025
Keywords: Family management, Home Care, Symptoms and symptom management

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 498117
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/498117
ISSN: 2045-435X
PURE UUID: 36426ff7-afc4-4c6a-84af-332e4258f827
ORCID for Christina Liossi: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-0627-6377

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Date deposited: 10 Feb 2025 17:45
Last modified: 15 May 2025 01:41

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Contributors

Author: Simone Holley
Author: Margaret Johnson
Author: Emma L. Stibbs
Author: Kate Renton
Author: Emily Harrop

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