Literature DB >> 16752958

Rural women caregivers in Canada.

Kay E Crosato1, Beverly Leipert.   

Abstract

CONTEXT: Informal caregiving within rural contexts in Canada is increasing. This is due in part to a number of factors related to the restructuring of the Canadian health care system, the regionalization of services to urban locations, the increased population of people 65 years and older, and the desire of this population to age within their rural homes. Most often, the informal caregiving role is assumed by rural women. Women tend to fall into the role of informal caregiver to elders because of the many societal and gender expectations and values that are present within the rural culture. The purpose of this literature review is to identify the context in which women provide care for an elder in rural Canada. Illustrating these issues will help to uncover challenges and barriers rural women face when providing care and highlight recommendations and implications for rural women caregivers and nurses employed within rural settings. ISSUES: Many rural women share similar caregiving experiences as urban informal caregivers, but rural women are faced with additional challenges in providing quality care for an elder. Rural women caregivers are faced with such issues as limited access to adequate and appropriate healthcare services, culturally incongruent health care, geographical distance from regionalized centers and health services, transportation challenges, and social/geographical isolation. In addition to these issues, many rural women are faced with the multiple role demands that attend being a wife, mother, caregiver and employee. The pile up of these factors leaves rural women caregivers susceptible to additional stresses and burn out, with limited resources on which to depend. LESSONS: Through reviewing pertinent literature, appropriate implications and recommendations can be made that may assist rural women caregivers and rural nurses. Nurses working within rural communities are in ideal settings to work collaboratively in building supportive relationships with rural women in order to promote the health and wellbeing of caregivers, as well as the elders for which they provide care. More research is needed regarding rural women and their caregiving experiences of elders. In addition, rural and remote courses and practicums should be made available to nursing students in order to encourage them and to support them in nursing careers in rural settings, thereby providing rural women caregivers with additional appropriate and consistent healthcare services. Also, governments and policy makers should consider the rural context and the challenges that are associated with providing care to an elder in a rural setting to ensure that rural women caregivers and their care recipients are well supported within their rural communities.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 16752958

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Rural Remote Health        ISSN: 1445-6354            Impact factor:   1.759


  6 in total

1.  Domesticating dialysis: A feminist political economy analysis of informal renal care in rural British Columbia.

Authors:  Julia Brassolotto; Tamara Daly
Journal:  Can Geogr       Date:  2016-10-06

Review 2.  Rural Men's Health, Health Information Seeking, and Gender Identities: A Conceptual Theoretical Review of the Literature.

Authors:  Bradley Hiebert; Beverly Leipert; Sandra Regan; Jacquelyn Burkell
Journal:  Am J Mens Health       Date:  2016-05-11

3.  Evaluation of CancerChatCanada: a program of online support for Canadians affected by cancer.

Authors:  J Stephen; A Rojubally; K Macgregor; D McLeod; M Speca; J Taylor-Brown; K Fergus; K Collie; J Turner; S Sellick; G Mackenzie
Journal:  Curr Oncol       Date:  2013-02       Impact factor: 3.677

4.  Rural Family Caregiving: A Closer Look at the Impacts of Health, Care Work, Financial Distress, and Social Loneliness on Anxiety.

Authors:  Tanya L'Heureux; Jasneet Parmar; Bonnie Dobbs; Lesley Charles; Peter George J Tian; Lori-Ann Sacrey; Sharon Anderson
Journal:  Healthcare (Basel)       Date:  2022-06-21

5.  No Improvement in Metabolic Health Condition of 40-74-year-old Rural Residents One Year After Screening.

Authors:  Yoshihisa Hirakawa; Kazumasa Uemura
Journal:  J Rural Med       Date:  2013-11-30

6.  Determinants of basic public health services provision by village doctors in China: using non-communicable diseases management as an example.

Authors:  Tongtong Li; Trudy Lei; Zheng Xie; Tuohong Zhang
Journal:  BMC Health Serv Res       Date:  2016-02-04       Impact factor: 2.655

  6 in total

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