| Literature DB >> 32767973 |
Anna Milberg1,2, Maria Liljeroos3,4,5, Rakel Wåhlberg2, Barbro Krevers1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Despite evidence that family members' support to each other can be of importance to its members, there are limited studies of factors related to family members' sense of such support during palliative care. AIM: Based on the family systems approach, we evaluated which factors were associated with family members' sense of support within their closest family in a palliative home care context and developed a model that predicts such sense of support.Entities:
Keywords: Family members; Family system theory; Palliative home care; Support
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32767973 PMCID: PMC7414563 DOI: 10.1186/s12904-020-00623-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Palliat Care ISSN: 1472-684X Impact factor: 3.234
Fig. 1a-b. A theoretical conceptual description of the hypothesised relationships formulated before the study (Fig. 1a) and a schematic representation of the selected variables in the final model predicting family member’s sense of support within the closest family (Fig. 1b). It was hypothesised that the family member’s sense of support within the closest family (dependent variable; dark grey box) would be associated with five domains (in white boxes), each domain representing a subsystem or suprasystem (in light grey boxes)
Fig. 2Overview of study enrolment
Variable domain 1. Family characteristics. Sample characteristics of the interviewed family members (n = 209) and analysis of the individual variables in Domain 1. Family characteristics (subsystem Family member -Closest family) in relation to the family members’ sense of support within the closest family (dependent variable)
| Variable domain | Variable (range of response alternatives/index) | % | Description | Wald values | Relation-ship |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 99 | 60.5 [13.3];(21–87) | 2.34 | |||
| Gender: male/female | 99 | 45%/55% | 0.02 | ||
| Married or partner/ single | 100 | 89%/ 11% | 0.13 | ||
| Living conditions | |||||
| Alone | 99 | 11% | pos | ||
| with husband, wife or cohabitant | 99 | 84% | 2.71 | ||
| with children | 99 | 12% | neg | ||
| with siblings or others | 99 | 3% | 0.29 | ||
| Have children | 100 | 88% | 1.19 | ||
| Native born in Sweden | 100 | 92% | 1.68 | ||
| Education (highest level completed) (1–6) | 100 | 0.11 | |||
| 1(No formal)/ 2(Basic education only)/ | 3%/ 21%/ | ||||
| 3(High school)/ 4(Vocational education/ | 22%/ 20%/ | ||||
| 5(University< 3 years)/ 6(University 3 years or more) | 9%/ 23% | ||||
| Relation to the patient | |||||
| Husband, wife or partner | 64% | 0.92 | |||
| Child | 31% | 3.26 | |||
| Other | 6% | ||||
| Main occupation | |||||
| Employed | 100 | 50% | 2.57 | ||
| Caring for family member with reimbursement | 100 | 10% | 0.48 | ||
| Caring for family member without reimbursement | 100 | 7% | 0.43 | ||
| Age pensioner | 100 | 40% | pos | ||
| EQ 5D index (−0.594 (worst possible) – 1.00 (best possible)) | 100 | 0.74[0.23];(−0.02–1) | 1.98 | ||
| Mobility (1 (no problems - 3 (severe problems)) | 100 | 1.16[0.38];(1–3) | 0.19 | ||
| Self-care (1 (no problems - 3 (severe problems)) | 100 | 1.02[0.14];(1–2) | 2.60 | ||
| Usual activities (1 (no problems - 3 (severe problems)) | 100 | 1.10[0.32];(1–3) | 0.02 | ||
| Pain/Discomfort (1 (no problems - 3 (severe problems)) | 100 | 1.68[0.59];(1–3) | 0.40 | ||
| Anxiety/Depression (1 (no problems - 3 (severe problems)) | 100 | 1.68[0.58];(1–3) | neg | ||
| General health (from SF-36; 1(excellent) - 5 (bad)) | 100 | 2.79[1.11];(1–5) | 2.67 | ||
| General Quality of life (from WHO QOL 100; 1(very bad) - 5 (very good)) | 100 | 3.66[0.90];(1–5) | pos | ||
| Type of support the family member provided to the ill person | |||||
| Health care | 100 | 63% | 1.89 | ||
| Physical, personal care | 99 | 48% | 0.67 | ||
| Transport | 100 | 74% | 0.87 | ||
| Emotional, social support | 100 | 98% | 0.64 | ||
| Support in home and household | 100 | 80% | 0.27 | ||
| Support with financial management | 100 | 59% | 0.53 | ||
| Financial support | 100 | 19% | 0.23 | ||
| Organise care and support | 100 | 69% | 0.00 | ||
| Extent of support the family member provided to the ill person (1–6) | 98 | 0.49 | |||
| 1(Around-the-clock)/ 2(Always daytime)/ 3(Several times per day | 32%/ 10%/ 20% | ||||
| 4(Once per day)/ 5(Some time per week)/ 6(No need) | 11%/ 7%/ 5%/ 13% | ||||
| Family members’ perception of being a family caregiver | |||||
| Negative impact (COPE | 100 | 10.48[3.02];(7–22) | neg | ||
| Positive value (COPE_POS) (4–16) | 99 | 14.08[1.81];(6–16) | pos | ||
| Quality of support (COPE_Support) (4–16) | 99 | 12.58[2.60];(5–16) | pos | ||
| Possibility of respite if family member needed a break (1–3) | 100 | ||||
| (1(no)/ 2(yes, with some difficulty)/ 3(yes, easy)) | 15%/ 43%/ 42%/ | pos | |||
| Possibility of respite if family member turned ill (1–3) | 100 | ||||
| (1(no)/ 2(yes, with some difficulty)/ 3(yes, easy)) | 21%/ 37%/ 42% | pos | |||
| Anxiety dimension (ECR-M16 | 99 | 2.81[1.05];(1–6.25) | neg | ||
| Avoidance dimension (ECR-M16; 1–7) | 98 | 2.82[1.11];(1–6.25) | 2.59 | ||
| Nervousness and stress (from PSS | 100 | 3.0[1.18];(1–5) | neg | ||
| Too many problems to manage (from PSS; 1 (never) - 5 (very often)) | 100 | 2.19[1.11];(1–5) | 2.74 | ||
| Worry about private economy (1 (never) - 5 (very often)) | 100 | 1.70[1.11];(1–5) | 0.23 | ||
| Self-efficacy (from GSE | 100 | 3.28[0.67];(1–4) | 2,37 | ||
| Religious or existential faith that helps (1 (fully disagree) - 4 (fully agree)) | 100 | 2.26[1.08];(1–4) | 1.83 | ||
aWald =4 is approximately equivalent with p = 0.05; Wald = 6 is approximately equivalent with p = 0.01
bToo diverse in data (merged categories) to be meaningful to compute
cSEC-R, The sense of security in care-Relatives’ Evaluation instrument; COPE, assessment of negative impact, positive value and quality of support of caregiving in informal carers of older people; ECR-M16, Experiences in Close Relationships scale; EQ-5D, EuroQol-5D; PSS, Perceived Stress Scale; GSE, General Self-Efficacy Scale
Variable domains 2–5. Sample characteristics and analysis of the individual variables in Domain 2–5 in relation to the family members’ sense of support within the closest family (dependent variable) Sample characteristics of patients (of the interviewed family members; n = 209) and analysis of the individual variables in relation to the family members’ sense of support within the closest family (dependent variable)
| Variable domain | Variable | % | Description | Wald values | Relation-ship |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
( | |||||
| Patient’s age (in years) | 94 | 68.5 [13.77]; (20–94) | 0.53 | ||
| Patient’s gender: male/ female | 94 | 39%/ 55% | 1.29 | ||
| Patient native born in Sweden | 99 | 88% | 0.30 | ||
| Patient’s living conditions | |||||
| Alone | 98 | 27% | 2.07 | ||
| With wife/husband/co-habitant | 98 | 65% | 0.04 | ||
| With child | 98 | 5% | neg | ||
| With other | 98 | 8% | 3.44 | ||
| Geographical distance between housing of patient and family member | 99 | 0.44 | |||
| Same household/ 5–60 min distance/More than 1 h | 62%/ 30%/ 6% | ||||
| Patient having difficulties with memory (1 (never) – 5 (very often) | 99 | 2.16 [1.27]; (1–5) | 0.48 | ||
| Patient having changed behaviour (1 (never) - 5 (very often)) | 99 | 2.39 [1.18];(1–5) | neg | ||
| Malignant diagnoses | |||||
| Gastro-intestinal | 94 | 30 | 0.02 | ||
| Respiratory | 94 | 11% | 2.85 | ||
| Breast | 94 | 11% | 0.29 | ||
| Gynaecological | 94 | 6% | 0.21 | ||
| Urological | 94 | 13% | 0.19 | ||
| Haematological | 94 | 6% | 1.69 | ||
| Other malignancies | 94 | 10% | 0.72 | ||
| Non-malignant diagnoses | 94 | 7% | 0.18 | ||
| Time since diagnosis (in months) | 99 | 35.0 [44.89];1–240) | 0.03 | ||
| Support to family member from other family members than the closest family (1 (never) - 6 (always)) | 98 | 4.68 [1.16];(2–6) | pos | ||
| Support to patient from other family members, relatives or friends (1 (never) - 6 (always)) | 97 | 4.57 [1.25];(1–6) | pos | ||
| 99 | 5.12 [0.70];(1–6) | pos | |||
| Mastery subscale (SEC-R; 1 (never) - 6 (always)) | 100 | 4.20 [0.96];(1.6) | pos | ||
| Patient situation subscale (SEC-R; 1 (never) - 6 (always)) | 100 | 4.82 [0.76];(1–6) | pos | ||
| Time from commencement of palliative home care to the interview with the family member (days) | 93 | 187 [377.7];(11–4256) | 1.72 | ||
aWald =4 is approximately equivalent with p = 0.05; Wald = 6 is approximately equivalent with p = 0.01
bNeurological disease (n = 9), heart- or lung disease (n = 4), and other (n = 2)
cSEC-R, The sense of security in care-Relatives’ Evaluation instrument; ECR-M16, Experiences in Close Relationships scale
Overview of measures. The five domains potentially related to the dependent variable (The family members’ sense of support within the closest family) were evaluated by the variables listed in the table
| Variable domain ( | Measures | Origin |
|---|---|---|
| a | ||
| 1 | ||
| General quality of life: the WHO QOL 100: one question; 5-point scale: 1 (very poor) – 5 (very good) | 2 | |
| General health: one overall question from the SF-36; 5-point scale: 1 (excellent health) – 5 (poor health) | 3 | |
| Type of support/care the family member provided to the ill person: eight alternatives; yes/no (see Table | a | |
| Extent of support the family member provided to the ill person: one question; 6-point scale: 1 (around-the-clock) – 6 (no need of support) | a | |
| The family member’s perception of being a family caregiver: the COPE questionnaire: 15 questions; 4 point scale: 1 (never) – 4 (always) based on 3 validated sub-scales: Negative impact scale, Positive value scale and Quality of support scale | 4 | |
| Possibility of respite if family member needed a break: one question; 3-point scale: 1 (no) – 2 (yes, with some difficulty) – 3 (yes, easy) | a | |
| Possibility of respite if family member became ill: one question; 3-point scale: 1 (no) – 2 (yes, with some difficulty) – 3 (yes, easy) | a | |
attachment anxiety (fear of rejection and abandonment); mean value of 8 items and avoidance (discomfort with closeness and dependence on close others; mean value of 8 items) in close relationships (including non-romantic partners); 7-point scale: 1 (lower attachment insecurity) - 7 (greater attachment insecurity) | 5 | |
Stress: two (of ten) items from the Perceived Stress Scale (PSS); 5-point scale: 0 (never) – 4 (very often) | 6 | |
| Worry about personal finances during the last month: 5-point scale: 0 (never) – 4 (very often) | a | |
| Self-efficacy: One statement (of ten) from the General Self-Efficacy Scale (GSE); 4-point scale: 1 (not at all true) – 4 (exactly true) | 7,8 | |
| Religious or existential belief that helps the informant to cope with problems: One statement; 4-point scale: 1 (not at all true) – 4 (exactly true) | a | |
| a | ||
Patient diagnosis and the time since diagnosis. | b | |
| Patient having difficulties with memory (according to the family member’s perception): one question;5-point response scale: 1 (never) – 5 (very often) | a | |
| Patient having changed behaviour: one question; 5-point response scale (according to the family member’s perception): 1 (never) – 5 (very often) | a | |
| The family member’s perception of support from members of the family, relatives and friends other than those closest to them: one question; 6-point response scale: 1 (never) – 6 (always) | a | |
| The family members’ perception of the patient being supported by family members other than those who were interviewed: one question; 6-point response scale: 1 (never) - (always) | a | |
| 9 | ||
| Time (days) from commencement of palliative home care services to the interview (with the family member) | b |
aDeveloped by the authors, bMedical record
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Step-wise analyses (Best subset) for prediction of family member’s sense of support within the family (dependent variable) during the palliative home care period. Only variables in the five domains (each domain representing a subsystem or suprasystem) with Wald > 2 (see Table 1 and 2) were allowed to be included in the step-wise analyses
| Variable domain | AIC | Variable | Wald value | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| STEP 0 | STEP 1 | STEP 2 | STEP 3 | STEP 4 | STEP 5 | Step 6 | STEP 7 Best subset | |||
| 506.1 | Support to patient from other family members. Relatives or friends (1 (never) - 6 (always)) | 43.97 | 33.71 | 6.30 | 4.58 | 2.74 | 3.24 | 3.30f | ||
| 518.7 | Care interaction subscale (SEC-R | |||||||||
| Mastery subscale (SEC-R; 1 (never) - 6 (always)) | ||||||||||
| Patient situation subscale (SEC-R; 1 (never) - 6 (always)) | 14.22 | 11.82 | 9.71 | 9.94 | 8.30 | 10.02 | 9.98f | |||
| Time from admittance to palliative care unit (days) | ||||||||||
| 520.7 | Support to family member from other family members than the closest family (1 (never) - 6 (always)) | 50.24 | 10.06 | 9.48 | 8.72 | 10.06 | 11.71f | |||
( | 523.9 | |||||||||
| 525.8 | Patient’s age (in years) | |||||||||
| Patient’s gender: male/female | ||||||||||
| Patient native born i n Sweden (%) | ||||||||||
| Patient’s living conditions | ||||||||||
| Alone | ||||||||||
| With wife/husband/co-habitant | ||||||||||
| With child | 5.04 | 3.44 | ||||||||
| With other | ||||||||||
| Geographical distance between housing of patient and family member | ||||||||||
| (Same household (1)-More than 1 h distance (6)) | ||||||||||
| 553.9 | Malignant diagnoses | |||||||||
| Respiration | 2.39 | |||||||||
| Breast | ||||||||||
| Gynaecological | ||||||||||
| Urological | ||||||||||
| Haematological | ||||||||||
| Other malignancies | ||||||||||
| 546.9 | Non-malignant diagnosesc | |||||||||
| 576.0 | Patient having difficulties with memory (1 (never) - 5 (very often)) | |||||||||
| Patient having changed behaviour (1 (never) - 5 (very often)) | 4.41 | 2.42 | ||||||||
| Time since diagnosis (in months) | ||||||||||
| 534.4 | ||||||||||
| 578.7 | ||||||||||
| Age (in years) | 3.11 | 3.33 | 2.59 | |||||||
| Gender: male/female | ||||||||||
| Married or partner/ single | 5.55 | 2.52 | ||||||||
| Living conditions | ||||||||||
| Alone | 2.61 | 2.74 | 5.07 | 8.13 | 7.29f | |||||
| with husband. Wife or cohabitant | 2.48 | |||||||||
| with children | 2.32 | 2.26 | ||||||||
| Have children | 2.41 | 4.38 | ||||||||
| Native born in Sweden | ||||||||||
| Education (highest level completed) (No formal education (1)-University 3 yeats or more (6)) | ||||||||||
| Main occupation | ||||||||||
| Employed | ||||||||||
| Self-employed | ||||||||||
| Caring for family member with grant | ||||||||||
| Caring for family member without grant | ||||||||||
| Old-age pensioner | 4.95 | 2.17 | 2.01 | |||||||
| Relation to the patient | ||||||||||
| Husband. wife or partner | ||||||||||
| Child | 3.09 | 4.91 | 2.38 | 3.26 | 3.87f.g | |||||
| 595.3 | ||||||||||
| Type of support/care the family member provided to the ill person | ||||||||||
| Health care | ||||||||||
| Physical. personal care | ||||||||||
| Transport | ||||||||||
| Emotional. social support | ||||||||||
| Support in home and household | 2.34 | |||||||||
| Support with financial management | ||||||||||
| Financial support | ||||||||||
| Organise care and support | ||||||||||
| Extent of support/attendance/care the family member provided to the ill person | ||||||||||
| (Around the clock (1) - No need (6)) | ||||||||||
| Family members’ perception of being a family caregiver | ||||||||||
| Negative impact (COPE_NEG) (4–28) | 2.07 | |||||||||
| Positive value (COPE_POS) (4–16) | ||||||||||
| Quality of support (COPE_SUPPORT) (4–16) | 5.59 | 5.46 | ||||||||
| Possibility of respite if family member needed a break (Easy (1)- No (3)) | 5.37 | 10.66 | 6.61 | 6.40 | 7.67f | |||||
| Possibility of respite if family member turned ill (Easy (1)- No (3)) | ||||||||||
| 618.9 | ||||||||||
| Anxiety dimension (ECR-M16 | 5.24 | 2.15 | ||||||||
| Avoidance dimension (ECR-M16; 1–7) | 2.01 | |||||||||
| 638.6 | ||||||||||
| EQ 5D index | ||||||||||
| General health (from SF-36; 1(excellent) - 5 (bad)) | ||||||||||
| Quality of life (from WHO QOL 100; 1(very bad) - 5 (very good)) | 2.34 | |||||||||
| 638.8 | ||||||||||
| Nervousness and stress (from PSS | 4.22 | 3.54 | 2.03 | |||||||
| Too many problems to manage (from PSS; 1 (never) - 5 (very often)) | ||||||||||
| Worry about private economy (1 (never) - 5 (very often)) | ||||||||||
| Self-efficacy (from GSE | ||||||||||
| Religious or existential faith that helps (1 (fully disagree) - 4 (fully agree)) | ||||||||||
aWald = 4 is approximately equivalent with p = 0.05; Wald = 6 is approximately equivalent with p = 0.01. Only variables with Wald> 2 were selected for further analyses
bThe variables in both the “Characteristics of the patient” and the “Characteristics of the family member” domain were considered too many compared with number of respondents to be computed at the same time, so in Step 0 variables in these domains were divided into subdomains and Wald values for each subdomain were computed
cNeurological disease (n = 9). heart- or lung disease (n = 4). and other (n = 2)
dSEC-R. The sense of security in care-Relatives’ Evaluation instrument; COPE. assessment of negative impact. Positive value and quality of support of caregiving in informal carers of older people; ECR-M16. Experiences in Close Relationships scale; EQ-5D. EuroQol-5D; PSS. Perceived Stress Scale; GSE. General Self-Efficacy Scale
eBold italic indicates variables that were excluded from the following steps
fVariable that was selected in the Best subset analyses
gNegative relationship to end-point