Development of a family caregiver needs-assessment scale for end-of-life care for senility at home (FADE)

Article indépendant

SAITO, Midori | TADAKA, Etsuko | ARIMOTO, Azusa

AIM: This study aimed to develop a "family caregiver needs-assessment scale for end-of-life care for senility at home" (FADE) and examine its reliability and validity. METHOD: A draft item pool was developed based on a literature review, and simplified to 30 items in four domains. Next, the item pool was reviewed by four visiting nurses and four researchers and refined to 15 items. A cross-sectional study was then conducted using a self-reported questionnaire. Questionnaires were sent to 2703 visiting nurses. The survey questions included participants' basic demographic information, the importance of each item according to a modified scale, basic demographics for cases of death by senility at home, satisfaction with each item of the modified scale in an example case, and assessment of the case using the Japanese version of the Support Team Assessment Schedule (STAS-J). Internal consistency was assessed using Cronbach's alpha. Construct validity was confirmed using confirmatory factor analysis, and correlation between the new scale and the STAS-J was used to assess criterion-related validity. RESULTS: In total, 461 visiting nurses provided valid responses. The exploratory and confirmatory factor analyses identified 12 items from two factors: "Needs for adaptation to senility bereavement" and "Needs for essential skills in supporting a dignified death by senility." The final model showed appropriate index values: standardized root mean residual = 0.057, Tucker-Lewis index = 0.920, Akaike information criterion = 191.6, and Bayesian information criterion = 298.2. Cronbach's alpha for the entire scale was 0.908, and was above 0.840 for each factor. The correlation coefficient between STAS-J and the entire scale was 0.259-0.427 (p<0.001). CONCLUSIONS: The FADE scale showed acceptable internal consistency and concurrent validity. The scale can help clarify issues and desires that present themselves at home related to adaptation to senility bereavement and essential skills in supporting a dignified death by senility. Addressing these issues and desires is expected to reduce caregivers' anxiety and burden, and means the older adults under their care may be respected and enabled to live with dignity and peace.

http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0222235

Voir la revue «Plos one, 14»

Autres numéros de la revue «Plos one»

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Development of a family caregiver needs-asses...

Article indépendant | SAITO, Midori | Plos one | n°9 | vol.14

AIM: This study aimed to develop a "family caregiver needs-assessment scale for end-of-life care for senility at home" (FADE) and examine its reliability and validity. METHOD: A draft item pool was developed based on a literature ...

Effectiveness of the online daily diary (ONDI...

Article | ITO, Eriko | Complementary therapies in clinical practice | vol.46

OBJECTIVES: There are many effective palliative care programs for patients with advanced cancer. However, little is known about effective programs for family caregivers of patients with advanced cancer, especially in home-based pa...

Effectiveness of the online daily diary (ONDI...

Article indépendant | ITO, Eriko | Complementary therapies in clinical practice | vol.46

OBJECTIVES: There are many effective palliative care programs for patients with advanced cancer. However, little is known about effective programs for family caregivers of patients with advanced cancer, especially in home-based pa...

De la même série

Recruitment, follow-up and survival in an 11-...

Article indépendant | SCHELIN, Maria E. C. | Plos one | n°1 | vol.20

BACKGROUND: Large, international cohort studies generate high-level evidence, but are resource intense. In end-of-life care such studies are scarce. Hence, planning for future studies in terms of data on screening, recruitment, re...

Use of virtual care near the end of life befo...

Article indépendant | QUINN, Kieran L. | Plos one | n°1 | vol.20

BACKGROUND AND AIMS: The expanded use of virtual care may worsen pre-existing disparities in use and delivery of end-of-life care among certain groups of people. We measured the use of virtual care in the last three months of life...

Specialty palliative care use among cancer pa...

Article indépendant | CASSEL, J. Brian | Plos one | n°1 | vol.20

BACKGROUND: Rigorous population-based assessments of the use of specialty palliative care (SPC) in the US are rare. SETTINGS/SUBJECTS: This study examined SPC use among cancer patients in a mid-sized metropolitan area in Southeast...

Peaceful dying among Canada's elderly : an an...

Article indépendant | ARYAL, Komal | Plos one | n°1 | vol.20

INTRODUCTION: Death is universal, yet relatively little is known about how Canadians experience their death. Using novel decedent interview data from the Canadian Longitudinal Study on Aging we describe the prevalence and characte...

The liminal space between hope and grief : th...

Article indépendant | VAN REENEN, Eva C. | Plos one | n°1 | vol.20

BACKGROUND: People with the chronic disease Multiple Sclerosis are subjected to different degrees of profound uncertainty. Uncertainty has been linked to adverse psychological effects such as feelings of heightened vulnerability, ...

Chargement des enrichissements...