Subjective Experiences of Coping Among Caregivers in Palliative Care

Author(s):  
Sarah Uren ◽  
Tanya Graham

Several research studies have sought to quantify the effects of formal caregiving on the caregivers; however, limited research has described the experiences of caregiving using a qualitative research design. In this study, we used an interpretative, phenomenological method to explore how coping operates as a central resource for trained caregivers and professional nurses in a palliative care setting. Eleven participants from a community-based, palliative care organisation in South Africa provided narrative accounts of coping within the caregiving process. Our findings identified seven themes related to the different dimensions of coping and the implications of these responses on individual caregivers. In this article, we discuss the cumulative effect of caregiver exposure to stressors, consider future directions to enhance caregiving, and conclude that effective caregiver coping plays a substantial role in caregiver and patient wellbeing and should therefore be a central component of enhancing palliative care interventions.

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Eileen McKinlay

<p>I am a Registered Comprehensive Nurse with dual practice interests in the care of terminally ill people, and in quality improvement. This research study originates from my experience of working in a hospice as a clinical nurse then as a quality improvement co-ordinator in the early 1990s. At this time, quality improvement in the health services was relatively new, and there was no locally published research on quality improvement in palliative care. World wide there was a developing body of palliative care quality improvement literature (Higginson 1989, 1993, 1995); however there had been little research undertaken which reflected the patients' perception of the palliative care experience.  As a result of my work experience came the quest to find out directly from patients, the aspects of care which they considered valuable. I chose to use the descriptive-phenomenological methodology particularly utilising van Manen's (1990) phenomenological method. This methodology allows the participants' experience to stand apart from existing health professional defined palliative care knowledge, yet provides a way for this participant  knowledge to complement and augment it.  This descriptive-phenomenological study describes six persons' experience of care within a palliative care setting, and discusses the possible significance that this may have for the practice of palliative care. The participants had at least two care experiences within this setting and were interviewed on one occasion shortly after their discharge, within their own homes.  I invited the participants to talk about their care experiences. The anecdotes  which the participants relayed, when reflected on, revealed both a pattern of  storytelling as well as individual components of care. These components or elements of the care experience as well as informing each other, created a representation, a schematic description of their experience.  The representation 'The circle of care', is orientated around the central component of 'identity', with the encircling valued components of care being: 'keeping control', 'being safe', 'chosen isolation', 'mortality awareness', 'relaxation and relinquishment', 'caring qualities', 'being watched' and 'humour'. The circle of 'palliative care philosophy' contained these components, finally being enclosed by an outer circle of the 'spiritual\aesthetic qualities of the environment of care'.  The reality of people receiving palliative care is characterised by a number of supportive traditional and non-traditional aspects of caring. Although some characteristics have been described within general health and palliative care literature, some appear to have been generated by these particular participants as part their reality. The selected methodological approach and results limit the study to the context in which it was conducted. However the study suggests that patients are valued informants, and that they are able to augment existing palliative care knowledge. Ideally their input should be sought within the current systems of evaluating existing care and in the  creation of new models of care.</p>


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Eileen McKinlay

<p>I am a Registered Comprehensive Nurse with dual practice interests in the care of terminally ill people, and in quality improvement. This research study originates from my experience of working in a hospice as a clinical nurse then as a quality improvement co-ordinator in the early 1990s. At this time, quality improvement in the health services was relatively new, and there was no locally published research on quality improvement in palliative care. World wide there was a developing body of palliative care quality improvement literature (Higginson 1989, 1993, 1995); however there had been little research undertaken which reflected the patients' perception of the palliative care experience.  As a result of my work experience came the quest to find out directly from patients, the aspects of care which they considered valuable. I chose to use the descriptive-phenomenological methodology particularly utilising van Manen's (1990) phenomenological method. This methodology allows the participants' experience to stand apart from existing health professional defined palliative care knowledge, yet provides a way for this participant  knowledge to complement and augment it.  This descriptive-phenomenological study describes six persons' experience of care within a palliative care setting, and discusses the possible significance that this may have for the practice of palliative care. The participants had at least two care experiences within this setting and were interviewed on one occasion shortly after their discharge, within their own homes.  I invited the participants to talk about their care experiences. The anecdotes  which the participants relayed, when reflected on, revealed both a pattern of  storytelling as well as individual components of care. These components or elements of the care experience as well as informing each other, created a representation, a schematic description of their experience.  The representation 'The circle of care', is orientated around the central component of 'identity', with the encircling valued components of care being: 'keeping control', 'being safe', 'chosen isolation', 'mortality awareness', 'relaxation and relinquishment', 'caring qualities', 'being watched' and 'humour'. The circle of 'palliative care philosophy' contained these components, finally being enclosed by an outer circle of the 'spiritual\aesthetic qualities of the environment of care'.  The reality of people receiving palliative care is characterised by a number of supportive traditional and non-traditional aspects of caring. Although some characteristics have been described within general health and palliative care literature, some appear to have been generated by these particular participants as part their reality. The selected methodological approach and results limit the study to the context in which it was conducted. However the study suggests that patients are valued informants, and that they are able to augment existing palliative care knowledge. Ideally their input should be sought within the current systems of evaluating existing care and in the  creation of new models of care.</p>


2016 ◽  
Vol 47 (3) ◽  
pp. 125-135 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sarah E. Gaither ◽  
Jessica D. Remedios ◽  
Jennifer R. Schultz ◽  
Keith B. Maddox ◽  
Samuel R. Sommers

Abstract. Research shows that I-sharing, or sharing subjective experiences with an outgroup member, positively shapes attitudes toward that outgroup member. We investigated whether this type of social experience would also promote a positive interracial interaction with a novel outgroup member. Results showed that White and Black participants who I-shared with a racial outgroup member (vs. I-sharing with a racial ingroup member) expressed more liking toward that outgroup member. However, I-sharing with an outgroup member did not reduce anxious behavior in a future social interaction with a novel racial outgroup member. Therefore, although sharing subjective experiences may increase liking toward one individual from a racial outgroup, it remains to be seen whether this positive experience can influence behaviors in future interactions with other racial outgroup members. Future directions are discussed.


2012 ◽  
Vol 30 (8) ◽  
pp. 752-758 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cindy Lee ◽  
Ryash Vather ◽  
Anne O’Callaghan ◽  
Jackie Robinson ◽  
Briar McLeod ◽  
...  

2008 ◽  
Vol 14 (1) ◽  
pp. 25-32 ◽  
Author(s):  
Elizabeth Anita Thompson ◽  
Tina Quinn ◽  
Charlotte Paterson ◽  
Helen Cooke ◽  
Deidre McQuigan ◽  
...  

2007 ◽  
Vol 5 (4) ◽  
pp. 397-404 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maria E. Carlsson ◽  
Ingrid M. Nilsson

ABSTRACTObjectives:To improve the support to bereaved spouses during the year after the patient's death, a project was started consisting of three visits by a nurse (after 1, 3, and 13 months) with conversations about the patient's death and the spouse's life situation. The aim of this study was to describe the bereaved spouse's situation and adaptation during the first year after the loss.Methods:Spouses of patients cared for by The Advanced Home Care Team (APHCT) in Uppsala, Sweden, were invited to participate in the project. Each participant was encouraged to talk freely about his or her situation, but enough direction was given to ensure that all items listed on a standardized questionnaire were covered.Results:Fifty-one spouses met the inclusion criteria and were invited to participate and 45 accepted. The subjects felt quite healthy but were tired and suffered from sleep disturbance. The grief reactions had initially been high but showed a significant decline from 1 to 13 months (p < .01). Forty-nine percent had experienced postbereavement hallucinations.Significance of results:This study showed that the bereaved spouses felt quite healthy and adjusted quite well to their new life situation, after the patient's death in a palliative care setting. The grief reactions had initially been high but showed a significant decline during the year.


Nutrition ◽  
2021 ◽  
pp. 111264
Author(s):  
Enrico Ruggeri ◽  
Marilena Giannantonio ◽  
Rita Ostan ◽  
Federica Agostini ◽  
Anna Simona Sasdelli ◽  
...  

2014 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 62-67 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peter Eastman ◽  
Brian Le ◽  
Gillian McCarthy ◽  
James Watt ◽  
Mark Rosenthal

2017 ◽  
Vol 25 (10) ◽  
pp. 3253-3259 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. Vayne-Bossert ◽  
E. Richard ◽  
P. Good ◽  
K. Sullivan ◽  
J.R. Hardy

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document