Understanding what affects psychological morbidity in informal carers when providing care at home for patients at the end of life : A systematic qualitative evidence synthesis

Article indépendant

BAYLISS, Kerin | SHIELD, Tracey | WEARDEN, Alison | FLYNN, Jackie | ROWLAND, Christine | BEE, Penny | FARQUHAR, Morag | HARRIS, Danielle | HODKINSON, Alexander | PANAGIOTI, Maria | BOOTH, Margaret | COTTERILL, David | GOODBURN, Lesley | KNIPE, Cedric | GRANDE, Gunn

BACKGROUND: Informal carers are central in supporting patients at the end of life, but this has substantial negative impacts on carers' own mental health. When carers are unable to cope, this may affect their ability to support the patient and increase the likelihood of patient hospital admissions. Further, demographic changes mean demands for care at and before end of life are increasing and existing services will struggle to meet these demands. It is important to recognise carers as a vital resource and prevent adverse health outcomes from caregiving (and thereby limit their consequences). Large individual variation in the level of psychological morbidity from end-of-life caregiving suggests there is scope for interventions to improve carer mental health if we can understand the underlying factors. OBJECTIVES: This meta-synthesis of qualitative studies aims to identify factors reported by carers as important to their mental health. DATA SOURCES: Searches of MEDLINE, Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature, PsycINFO, Social Science Citation Index, EMBASE, Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials, Database of Abstracts of Reviews of Effects, and Cochrane Qualitative Reviews 1 January 2009 to 24 November 2019 for empirical publications from Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development countries in English/Scandinavian on factors affecting adult carer mental health during end-of-life caregiving in home settings. REVIEW METHODS: Systematic qualitative meta-synthesis in collaboration with a Public Patient Involvement carer Review Advisory Panel, included thematic synthesis, followed by a best-fit framework synthesis, informed by principles of meta-ethnography. Critical Appraisal Skills Programme Qualitative Studies Checklist was used. RESULTS: Thirty-three eligible studies identified six themes encompassing factors perceived by carers to affect their mental health during end-of-life caregiving. These were: (1) the patient condition (including patient decline); (2) impact of caring responsibilities (including exhaustion, lack of time for own needs, isolation); (3) relationships (including quality of the patient-carer relationship); (4) finances (including financial concerns, impact on work); (5) carers' internal processes (including loss of autonomy, lack of confidence, coping strategies); and (6) support (including lack of informal support, inadequacies in formal support information and care provision, limited collaboration, disjointed care). Reported strategies to improve mental health were linked to the final two themes, with suggestions on how to manage carers' internal processes and build appropriate support. Findings correspond with literature 1998-2008, indicating consistency in factors affecting carers and adding validity to findings. LIMITATIONS: The review was limited to caregiving in the home setting and studies from Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development countries published in English and Scandinavian. Identified papers predominantly considered carers of people with cancer, with little research into ethnic-minority perspectives. The review may therefore not fully encompass factors affecting carers of people with longer-term conditions, or those within other care settings, countries and population groups. CONCLUSIONS AND FUTURE WORK: A wide range of both internal and contextual factors may lead to psychological morbidity when caring for someone at the end of life. Future work within practice therefore requires a broad-based rather than narrow approach to sustaining and improving carer mental health. Future work within research requires collaboration between researchers and stakeholders within policy, commissioning, practice and carer organisations to develop solutions and assess their effectiveness. Further, researchers need to develop better models for factors affecting carer mental health and their interaction, to build a stronger evidence base and better guide interventions. STUDY REGISTRATION: This study is registered as PROSPERO CRD42019130279. FUNDING: This project was funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) Health and Social Care Delivery Research programme as award number HSDR 18/01/01 and will be published in full in Health and Social Care Delivery Research. See the NIHR Journals Library website for further project information.

http://dx.doi.org/10.3310/PYTR4127

Voir la revue «Health and social care delivery research»

Autres numéros de la revue «Health and social care delivery research»

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Understanding what affects psychological morb...

Article | BAYLISS, Kerin | Health and social care delivery research

BACKGROUND: Informal carers are central in supporting patients at the end of life, but this has substantial negative impacts on carers' own mental health. When carers are unable to cope, this may affect their ability to support th...

Understanding what affects psychological morb...

Article indépendant | BAYLISS, Kerin | Health and social care delivery research

BACKGROUND: Informal carers are central in supporting patients at the end of life, but this has substantial negative impacts on carers' own mental health. When carers are unable to cope, this may affect their ability to support th...

Understanding and addressing factors affectin...

Article | GRANDE, Gunn | Health and social care delivery research

BACKGROUND: Family carers provide crucial support to patients nearing end of life. This can affect carers' own mental health negatively. It is important to understand what factors may affect carers' mental health and convey this i...

De la même série

Using palliative care needs rounds in the UK ...

Article indépendant | FORBAT, Liz | Health and social care delivery research | n°19 | vol.12

BACKGROUND: Care home residents often lack access to end-of-life care from specialist palliative care providers. Palliative Care Needs Rounds, developed and tested in Australia, is a novel approach to addressing this. OBJECTIVE: T...

Integrating palliative care and heart failure...

Article indépendant | MCCONNELL, Tracey | Health and social care delivery research | n°34 | vol.12

BACKGROUND: Cardiovascular disease is the most common cause of death worldwide, highlighting the need for studies to determine options for palliative care within the management of patients with heart failure. Although there are pr...

Ambiguous loss in family caregivers of loved ...

Article | WEISS, Charlotte R. | Journal of cancer survivorship

PURPOSE: The purpose of this synthesis of qualitative studies is to explore manifestations of ambiguous loss within the lived experiences of family caregivers (FCG) of loved ones with cancer. Grief and loss are familiar companions...

Understanding what affects psychological morb...

Article indépendant | BAYLISS, Kerin | Health and social care delivery research

BACKGROUND: Informal carers are central in supporting patients at the end of life, but this has substantial negative impacts on carers' own mental health. When carers are unable to cope, this may affect their ability to support th...

Meeting social welfare legal needs in end-of-...

Article indépendant | HAWKINS, Colette | Health and social care delivery research

BACKGROUND: Social welfare legal needs (matters of daily life, such as finances, housing and employment with legal rights, entitlements or protections) are prevalent towards end of life, creating significant difficulties for both ...

Chargement des enrichissements...