| Literature DB >> 25729740 |
Tamara Ownsworth1, Elizabeth Goadby1, Suzanne Kathleen Chambers2.
Abstract
Shorter hospital stays and greater emphasis on outpatient care means that family members have the primary responsibility for supporting a person with brain tumor to manage the physical, cognitive, behavioral, and emotional effects of the illness and its treatment. Given the integral role of family caregivers, it is essential to understand their experience of the impact of brain tumor and their own support needs. Accordingly, this qualitative study aimed to investigate family caregivers' experiences of support and relationship changes in the context of brain tumor. In-depth interviews were conducted with 11 family caregivers (8 spouse/partner, 3 parents) of people with malignant or benign tumor. A thematic analysis of interview transcripts identified two major themes, namely, "Meanings of Support" and "Relationship Impacts." The Meanings of Support theme was characterized by intertwined and distinct support needs, varied expectations of support and factors influencing support expectations. The Relationship Impacts theme depicted mixed experiences of strengthened, maintained, and strained relations with the person with brain tumor. Overall, the findings highlight that there is considerable variability in caregivers' experiences and expectations of support and the impact of brain tumor on relationships. The implications of these findings for the provision of caregiver support are discussed.Entities:
Keywords: brain tumor; family caregivers; qualitative research; relationships; support
Year: 2015 PMID: 25729740 PMCID: PMC4325881 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2015.00033
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Guidelines and considerations for conducting and appraising qualitative research [see Ref. (.
| Guidelines | Specific considerations |
|---|---|
| Relevance of research | Research question is relevant |
| Aim is sufficiently focused and clearly stated | |
| Appropriate method and design | Qualitative research method chosen is the best approach for the research question/aims |
| Researchers acknowledge their personal background and experiences relevant to the phenomenon under investigation (i.e., reflexivity) | |
| Data collection and sampling | Strategy for data collection is clearly stated and appropriate to the research question |
| Theoretical: based on preconceived or emergent theory | |
| Purposive: diversity of opinion | |
| Volunteer: feasibility, hard to reach groups | |
| Justification for the approach is given | |
| Recruitment is conducted using appropriate methods | |
| Characteristics of the sample and setting are stated clearly and in sufficient detail | |
| Data analysis | The type of analysis is appropriate for the study |
| Principles and procedures for data analysis are fully described | |
| How categories and frameworks were identified is clearly stated | |
| Trustworthiness/rigor of the data and interpretation is established (e.g., triangulation) | |
| Findings | Quotes are used appropriately and effectively to support findings |
| Findings are relevant to the aims | |
| Discussion | Findings are compared with appropriate theoretical and empirical references |
| The design is scrutinized | |
| Limitations are considered | |
| Clear consequences of the study are proposed | |
| Ethical issues | Approval from an appropriate ethics committee received |
| Informed consent was sought and granted | |
| Participants anonymity and confidentiality ensured | |
| Clarity | Well-written and accessible |
Caregiver demographic characteristics and tumor type (note: the pseudonym and participant number are used to indicate caregivers’ gender, age, and relationship status to the person with brain tumor and the tumor type).
| Caregiver characteristics | Tumor type | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Grades I–II | Grades III–IV | ||||
| Relationship status | Married/ | Parent | Married/ | Parent | |
| Male | <50 | James (PT 4) | |||
| 50–60 | Sam (PT 9) | Barry (PT 1) | |||
| >60 | Jim (PT 10) | William (PT 8) | Michael (PT 7) | ||
| Female | <50 | Wendy (PT 6) | PT 12 | ||
| 50–60 | Susan (PT 11) | Laura (PT 5) | Joanne (PT 2) | ||
| >60 | Shelley (PT 3) | ||||
Sources of support and caregiver comments on the nature of support (.
| Source | Comments (no. of people providing comment) | |
|---|---|---|
| Brain tumor support group | 8 | Sharing experiences with others (4) |
| Provided information (3) | ||
| Could not attend due to work conflicts (2) | ||
| International brain tumor website | 4 | Provided useful information (4) |
| Brain injury outreach service | 1 | Supportive (1) |
| Cancer support association | 3 | Provided information (2) |
| Was unsure if helpline could help (1) | ||
| Hospital (generally) | 2 | Friendly staff (1) |
| We never got a follow up call at home (1) | ||
| Oncologist | 1 | Nice manner of interacting (1) |
| Doctor (specialty not specified) | 3 | Lovely, explained it all (1) |
| Knew who you were (1) | ||
| Medical support, not emotional support (1) | ||
| Nursing staff | 4 | They knew our situation (1) |
| Nice, but busy (1) | ||
| Medical support rather than psychological (2) | ||
| No follow up post discharge (1) | ||
| Social worker | 4 | Gave information about other services (1) |
| Too busy to see us (1) | ||
| No information about available services (2) | ||
| General practitioner | 6 | Emotional support (2) |
| Provided reassurance (1) | ||
| Provided information (3) | ||
| Neurosurgeon | 6 | Kind, caring, supportive (3) |
| Provided information (1) | ||
| No reassurance provided (2) | ||
| Blunt, lacking in empathy, defensive (2) | ||
| Acupuncturist | 1 | Easy to talk to, supportive manner (1) |
| Psychologist | 1 | Supportive (1) |
| Government agency | 2 | Provided financial assistance (1) |
| Friendly (1) | ||
| Health insurance | 3 | Helped to alleviate financial pressure (1) |
| Provided financial assistance (2) | ||
| Cancer community (i.e., online, face-to-face contact) | 3 | Shared similar experiences (1) |
| Shared information (2) | ||
| Family (children, partner, siblings, parents) | 9 | Emotional support (3) |
| Practical support (e.g., making meals) (3) | ||
| No emotional support (1) | ||
| Infrequent support (1) | ||
| Friends | 9 | Supportive (3) |
| Provided practical support (2) | ||
| Did not know how to be supportive (2) | ||
| Neighbors | 3 | Supportive (1) |
| Available for a chat (1) | ||
| Provided practical support (1) | ||
| A person with brain tumor | 1 | Supportive (1) |
| Church | 3 | Supportive (2) |
| No support offered (1) | ||
| Work colleagues | 5 | Supportive (2) |
| Allowed time off (1) | ||
| Financial support (1) |
Summary of categories, subcategories, and example key words or phrases.
| Main category | Sub category | Example key words or phrases |
|---|---|---|
| Source of support | Health professionals | Nurse |
| General practitioner | ||
| Neurosurgeon | ||
| Oncologist | ||
| Social worker | ||
| Psychologist | ||
| Services | Brain tumor support group | |
| Cancer support association | ||
| Health insurance provider | ||
| Government (e.g., disability support) | ||
| Brain injury outreach service | ||
| Informal network | Family | |
| Friends | ||
| Neighbors | ||
| Work colleagues | ||
| Cancer community | ||
| Type of support | Emotional | Someone to talk to |
| Keeping in touch | ||
| Being there when it mattered | ||
| Sharing experiences | ||
| Practical | Financial support | |
| Housework | ||
| Made meals for us, childcare | ||
| Information | Brain tumors | |
| Treatment | ||
| Supporting someone with a tumor | ||
| Nature of support | Time frame | Not daily, but there when we needed it |
| No support when we left hospital | ||
| Only contacted every couple of months | ||
| Manner of interacting | Warm, kind | |
| Gave hope | ||
| Blunt | ||
| Not empathetic | ||
| Gave no reassurance | ||
| Factors impacting on support | Support being offered | Distance |
| Short time between diagnosis and treatment | ||
| People not knowing what to say | ||
| Support being sought | Short time between diagnosis and treatment | |
| Shock after diagnosis | ||
| We thought he would be ok | ||
| Lack of knowledge about services | ||
| Time constraints/work conflicts | ||
| No services in our area | ||
| Impact on relationships | Changes in relationship | Made us closer |
| Abuse and criticism all day | ||
| Close before and still close now | ||
| Changes in roles | Full-time parent | |
| Main breadwinner | ||
| Increased household responsibilities | ||
| Change in employment |