| Literature DB >> 33806725 |
Jasneet Parmar1, Sharon Anderson1, Marjan Abbasi1, Saeed Ahmadinejad1, Karenn Chan1, Lesley Charles1, Bonnie Dobbs1, Amandeep Sheny Khera1, Jennifer Stickney-Lee1, Peter George J Tian1, Suvidha Jain1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Research, practice, and policy have focused on educating family caregivers to sustain care but failed to equip healthcare providers to effectively support family caregivers. Family physicians are well-positioned to care for family caregivers.Entities:
Keywords: carers; chronic disease; family caregiver; family physicians; multidisciplinary team; primary care
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33806725 PMCID: PMC8005195 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph18063293
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Focus Group Semi-Structured Interview Guide.
| Family Physicians and Primary Care Teams |
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How much do you interact with family caregivers in your practice? How do you see your role with family caregivers? Do you feel equipped to understand and care for the needs of family caregivers? How do you think you can support the needs of family caregivers here in primary care? Are there any barriers to supporting family caregivers in primary care? Do you think there is anything you can do professionally to better support family caregivers here in primary care? |
Stages of Thematic Analysis.
| Braun and Clarke’s Six Phase Approach to Thematic Analysis |
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| Stage 1: Become familiar with the data by listening to the recordings and reading through the transcripts |
Participant Demographics.
| Physicians | Primary Care Teams | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Participants | 10 | 42 | |
| Gender | Female | 8 | 39 |
| Male | 2 | 3 | |
| Age | Under 25 | 0 | 1 |
| 25–34 | 3 | 13 | |
| 35–44 | 1 | 11 | |
| 45–54 | 4 | 15 | |
| 55–64 | 2 | 1 | |
| Over 65 | 0 | 1 | |
| Professions | Family Physician | 10 | 0 |
| Registered Nurse | 23 | ||
| Psychiatric Nurse | 1 | ||
| Licensed Practical Nurse | 8 | ||
| Social Worker | 3 | ||
| Respiratory Therapist | 1 | ||
| Psychologist | 1 | ||
| Exercise Physiologist | 1 | ||
| Community Coordinator | 2 | ||
| Dietician | 2 |
Direct Quotes Illustrating Themes.
| Physicians | Primary Care Teams |
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| Good for the patient too | |
| First, just by acknowledging they have a hard role, like, “Hey you’re here again with your mom or whoever.” And I often ask them, “Do you have a family doctor of your own?” If the family caregiver is distressed, then that affects the patient [Doctor 8] | I think it is really important for us to identify family caregivers and especially burnout, because that affects the patient’s health as well. [PCT#2] |
| Primary Care continuity fosters relationship and trust | |
| The therapeutic alliance. Even though that might not be with the caregivers, but it does foster confidence and a better relationship, over-time right? [Doctor 10] | Because the patient usually comes back to our clinic, we do see them a lot, so you develop that trust with them. It happens over-time. Like it doesn’t in an initial on the first visit. Sometimes it’s not identifiable or it takes time. [PCT#2] |
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| Patient-focused health system | |
| The ones that I know are in a more demanding position, I’ll ask them to always book an appointment for themselves around that same time, or at least every couple months, I do that, just so we can touch base on how they’re doing or follow-up | Really, we are there to support the patient. We support the caregiver indirectly unless they are our patients and then we can support them directly. So yes, we refer them within the network, and we have lots of services within the network and we also refer them to Caregivers Alberta or the Alzheimer’s Society. [PCT#1] |
| Patient-focused health system-- Ethically challenged when family caregivers don’t have family physicians | |
| People don’t have a family doctor, and they’re busy, and they’re not taking care of themselves by seeing their family doctor if they have one. But if they don’t have one then it becomes really difficult because if you know this person needs to see a physician, then we’re thinking like, “Oh my God, do I try to add him onto my panel as well?” knowing that it will help your patient be taken better care of if the health needs of the caregivers, if they’ve got their doctor. The logistics of primary care, and well, healthcare and community systems stand in the way of effective support for family caregivers [Physician 5] | It is really hard when they aren’t patients, and they don’t seem to have a family doctor. We can tell them about the Alzheimer’s Society or Caregivers Alberta, but really, they need that regular care. [PCT#2] |
| Family caregivers don’t identify | |
| Sometimes, to be honest with you, the primary caregiver hasn’t self-identified as the caregiver. [Physician 7] | Like I’m not a caregiver, I’m just helping or whatever. Just doing my job but caring 24/7 doing all of the care and the housework, mowing the lawn, shoveling the oh my God. But no, I am not a caregiver. [PCT#1] |
| But there’s no ideal system for recording the caregiver in the patient chart or to link them. Perhaps NetCare or a substitute of it would let you identify patients instead of as patients but as family units. And they can link each other’s identifications. [Physician 4] | On NetCare, often you can look up next of kin for urgency visits [Speaker 5]. Find out who’s on their list for their contact [Speaker 4]. Sometimes I just pop-up notes to look for the person that looks after the person or we could discuss it with the person. I think we are working on some other ways of identifying, but there are not any in place yet. [Speaker 5] PCT#1, |
| Crisis triggers assessment | |
| Especially in a primary care setting, because a crisis may not have yet happened, they may not have identified or been assessed. In a hospital, you’re like, “Okay, who’s onboard? You’re designated, you’re the primary caregiver.” But when you’re in a primary care environment where you’re literally coming from your home, your street environment back into the clinic, you may not see yourself as that caregiver. So I think it is having that conversation. [Physician 7] | Or they verbally tell you, “I’m very stressed. I can’t do this anymore. I don’t know what to do.” Those are kind of the things that I look for. [PCT#2] |
| Assessments were Informal | |
| If they’re my patient I think I would assess them, mostly for the purpose of knowing how their wellbeing is, as you would if you saw any of your patients. But if they weren’t your patient I think my goal as far as saying, “How are you doing?” And maybe they elaborate very much on it and it won’t even be anything medical. Especially if they’re not even affiliated with your clinic, you may have to review | I think when she says she does it routinely, so we have different disciplines and they’re each working within different programs, and so our senior’s community hub. Two nurses down there are part of that program, so that will be part of their regular assessment. [PCT#1] |
| Onerous Navigation. | |
| Yeah, everybody is keeping these repositories of resources by themselves, some in your head, some are on bulletin boards, and some are in your drawer. [Doctor 5] | Speaker 5: Well, my experience with 211, using them for various other things, is that the people who are answering the phone don’t know enough about the programs to actually do that navigation. They’re working off a screen. But it isn’t really an experienced person who really knows those programs. So sometimes it’s just a waste of time. I could Google it faster probably. [PCT#1] |
| Transportation | |
| Well, many health outcomes are driven by community services like housing, income, or transportation. So transportation is a problem and these organizations | No, transportation’s a huge problem. It ties into finances a lot of the times but it also ties into the idea of respite for the caregiver. If an individual who is caregiving is also the main source of rides and transportation, and their time requirement has gone up, but it also decreases the independence of the carer if they can’t access transportation. [PCT#2] |
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| Assessment and Navigation | |
| When you have a book with a resource then it almost again takes the conversation away. Because what you need is a better understanding. I think what we need is recognizing that we can have these conversations. And then support to find the content from the conversation. What are some of the things that need to be designed there? Maybe that’s a go-to person who’s helping you with that, or it is some kind of smart pathway in or something. I agree too that I don’t have the | Speaker 4: The hand holding, the warm handoff, and then someone who gets back to us and lets us know where they are at… that’s missing. Often, we don’t hear from the caregiver and you don’t hear from the place you sent them. [PCN1] |
| Navigation Needs a Warm Handoff | |
| I think what would be good is if you had some kind of program where you could match a patient or caregiver who’s at risk to have a comprehensive assessment, which would include an occupational therapist who assesses their home care needs. And then if they have any, they will give the home care number. Would they benefit from Meals on Wheels? Do they need any equipment? If so, here’s the number on how to get it. Physio, transition coordinator would be involved. If everybody could be under one roof in the PCN, and that could be one visit even, potentially. And then you match the resources to what is needed, rather than having this five-page booklet of, “Here’s what’s out there, good luck.” [Physician 3] | Speaker 6: We need to strengthen the relationship between home care case managers and Primary Care because they often see that the work they’re doing with the family in their home as very separate, and they don’t need the Primary Care physicians involved in the care of this patient. |
| Spread and scale of best practices | |
| The same thing with down at our Senior’s Team. Our whole idea was how can we elevate our PCN and mobilize team members to help provide us the support for vulnerable seniors who have caregivers? Identify a timeframe that caregivers emerge and see themselves as caregivers. Even close to seeing themselves as caregivers. And so yes, we trained the team and the team’s fantastic. Their knowledge has gone up, their awareness of things has gone up, but we’re still running into | We have done so many pilot projects, and they are helpful for caregivers and patients. They just don’t stick, because they are research or pilot projects. [PCT#3] |