Evaluation of a multimodal rehabilitative palliative care programme for patients with high-grade glioma and their family caregivers

Article indépendant

NORDENTOFT, Sara | DIEPERINK, Karin B. | JOHANSSON, Susan D. | JARDEN, Mary | PIIL, Karin

BACKGROUND: Patients diagnosed with high-grade glioma and their family caregivers often experience intense disease and treatment trajectories. Fluctuations in patient's symptoms lead to enormous burdens for caregivers and the risk of developing symptoms of stress, anxiety, and depression. AIM: The study aim is to explore patient and caregiver experiences and evaluate the relevance of and satisfaction with a multimodal rehabilitative palliative care programme for patients diagnosed with a high-grade glioma and their family caregivers. METHODS: In a longitudinal multi-methods study, adult patients with high-grade glioma (n = 17) and their family caregivers (n = 16) completed a 4-day residential programme and a 2-day follow-up programme 3 months later. Participants completed questionnaires after each programme, scoring relevance and satisfaction on a 5-point Likert scale. Qualitative data were collected during four evaluation group interviews with patients and caregivers. RESULTS: The mean overall satisfaction score was 4.80 (standard deviation [SD], 0.55) for the initial 4-day programme and 4.28 (SD, 0.83) for the follow-up programme. Three themes emerged in the evaluation group interviews: (1) meeting peers strengthens social well-being, (2) the value of information and focusing on individual needs, and (3) accepting life as an unpredictable passage. CONCLUSION: Participants found completing the REHPA-HGG programme feasible and rated all sessions highly for relevance and satisfaction. Qualitative findings confirm the value of individualised information, acceptance, and peer interactions. IMPLICATION FOR PRACTICE: A multimodal rehabilitative palliative care programme addressed unmet patient and caregiver needs. Peer-to-peer interventions for family caregivers may address individual support needs. Similar programmes may maximise benefit by avoiding planned behaviour changes and enhancing palliative approaches.

http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/scs.13019

Voir la revue «Scandinavian journal of caring sciences»

Autres numéros de la revue «Scandinavian journal of caring sciences»

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Evaluation of a multimodal rehabilitative pal...

Article | NORDENTOFT, Sara | Scandinavian journal of caring sciences

BACKGROUND: Patients diagnosed with high-grade glioma and their family caregivers often experience intense disease and treatment trajectories. Fluctuations in patient's symptoms lead to enormous burdens for caregivers and the risk...

Evaluation of a multimodal rehabilitative pal...

Article indépendant | NORDENTOFT, Sara | Scandinavian journal of caring sciences

BACKGROUND: Patients diagnosed with high-grade glioma and their family caregivers often experience intense disease and treatment trajectories. Fluctuations in patient's symptoms lead to enormous burdens for caregivers and the risk...

Bereaved caregivers of patients with high-gra...

Article indépendant | PIIL, Karin | BMJ supportive & palliative care

OBJECTIVE: Caregivers to patients with primary malignant brain tumours neglect their own physical and emotional needs during the disease trajectory. The aim of the systematic review was to explore how informal caregivers of patien...

De la même série

A practice model for rural district nursing s...

Article indépendant | REED, Frances M. | Scandinavian journal of caring sciences | n°2 | vol.32

AIM: The development of a practice model for rural district nursing successful end-of-life advocacy care. BACKGROUND: Resources to help people live well in the end stages of life in rural areas can be limited and difficult to acce...

What it means to be a palliative care volunte...

Article indépendant | SCOTT, Ros | Scandinavian journal of caring sciences

This paper addresses the stories of volunteers in hospice and palliative care (HPC) from eight European countries. The aims of the paper are to explore the experiences of volunteers in HPC from their insider perspective, to unders...

Taking care of dying patients through an "int...

Article indépendant | TAFFURELLI, Chiara | Scandinavian journal of caring sciences

BACKGROUND: The interprofessional approach is part of the philosophy in palliative care, and its benefits are already documented. However, there are no evidence regarding the process through which the interprofessional team faces ...

First steps to integrate general palliative c...

Article indépendant | GUNDTOFT ROIKJAER, Stine | Scandinavian journal of caring sciences

BACKGROUND: Heart failure is a chronic, life-threatening illness with multiple acute events. Palliative care alongside standard treatment is recommended for these patients. There is a lack of knowledge and research literature on h...

Evaluation of a multimodal rehabilitative pal...

Article indépendant | NORDENTOFT, Sara | Scandinavian journal of caring sciences

BACKGROUND: Patients diagnosed with high-grade glioma and their family caregivers often experience intense disease and treatment trajectories. Fluctuations in patient's symptoms lead to enormous burdens for caregivers and the risk...

Chargement des enrichissements...