| Literature DB >> 35225048 |
Javad Yoosefi Lebni1, Seyed Fahim Irandoost2, Hossein Safari1,3, Tareq Xosravi4, Sina Ahmadi5, Goli Soofizad6, Farbod Ebadi Fard Azar1, Ava Sadat Hoseini7, Nafiul Mehedi8.
Abstract
Being COVID-19 positive and then dying causes a slew of personal, familial, and social issues for family members. Therefore, the current study was carried out to analyze the lived experiences and issues of COVID-19 victims' families in Tehran, Iran. The phenomenological approach was used in the qualitative analysis of 21 first-degree relatives of COVID-19 victims. From August 22 to October 21, 2020, data was gathered by phone (4 people) and in-person (17 people) using semi-structured interviews. The subjects were chosen through purposeful and snowball sampling. The MAXQDA-2018 program was used to organize the data, and the Colaizzi analytical technique was used to analyze it. Guba and Lincoln's criteria were also used to assess the findings' quality. After analyzing the data, 2 main categories and 14 subcategories were extracted, including (1) challenges in caring for a COVID-19 patient (being rejected, limited access to medical facilities, dissatisfaction with the behavior of medical staff, disruption of family life, the challenge of managing family members' behavior with the patient, and living with doubts and worries (2) challenges after a COVID-19 patient's death (incomplete farewell to the corpse, unbelievability of the death, ambiguity and tension in the burial process, lonely burial, the twinge of conscience, worry about not respecting the deceased, incomplete condolences, and abandonment). The troubles of victims' families can be ameliorated by developing the skills of caring for COVID-19 patients at home, providing medical and psychological services to families before and after the patient's death, appropriately informing the families to guarantee them about dignity and respect and respect of the deceased at the interment, and developing a culture of virtual condolence to provide emotional support to survivors.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; Iran; challenges; coronavirus; patients’ families; qualitative study
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35225048 PMCID: PMC8886310 DOI: 10.1177/00469580221081405
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Inquiry ISSN: 0046-9580 Impact factor: 1.730
The Guide to General Questions about the Interviews.
| No | Questions |
|---|---|
| 1 | How did you feel when someone in your family tested positive for COVID-19? |
| 2 | What problems and fears did you have while your patient was in the hospital? |
| 3 | How were you treated as a patient’s family member by the medical staff? |
| 4 | What were the other family members' reactions when you brought the patient home for care? And what issues did you encounter? |
| 5 | What changes have occurred in your family since the patient was discharged? |
| 6 | How did you and your family members react when you learned of the patient’s death? |
| 7 | What difficulties did you experience with burial? Please elaborate |
| 8 | How did you feel after your loved one died and was buried? And how did your family’s bereavement go? |
| 9 | How did your relatives treat you after the patient’s death? |
Demographic Information of the Research Participants.
| Variables | Dimensions | Frequency | Percentage |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age | Under 25 | 6 | 29 |
| 25-50 | 12 | 57 | |
| Over 50 | 3 | 14 | |
| Gender | Male | 11 | 52 |
| Female | 10 | 48 | |
| Marital status | Single | 7 | 33.3 |
| Married | 14 | 66.6 | |
| Relationship to the deceased | Parents | 2 | 10 |
| Brother/Sister | 3 | 14 | |
| Spouse | 4 | 19 | |
| Children | 12 | 57 | |
| Education | Illiterate | 1 | 5 |
| Diploma and less than diploma | 6 | 29 | |
| Higher than diploma | 14 | 66 | |
| Hospitalization duration of the patient in the hospital and at home
| Less than 1 week | 5 | 24 |
| 1-2 weeks | 7 | 33 | |
| Over 2 weeks | 9 | 43 |
aIt refers to the amount of time a patient was in the hospital or at home before passing away.
Codes, Categories, and Subcategories Extracted From Interviews.
| Categories | Subcategories | Codes |
|---|---|---|
| Challenges in caring for a COVID-19 patient | Being rejected | Avoidance of relatives, lack of relatives' visit with families with a COVID-19 patient, inappropriate behavior of neighbors, avoidance of colleagues, tension with neighbors to clean the apartment building |
| Limited access to medical facilities | Lack of medical equipment in the hospital, lack of ICU beds, etc., expensive oxygen devices, shortage and high cost of some drugs needed for COVID-19 patients, shortage and high cost of medical equipment needed to care for COVID-19 patients | |
| Dissatisfaction with medical staff behavior | Insufficient explanation about the patient’s condition, early discharge from the hospital, impatience of nurses in responding to patients' families, insufficient guidance on how to deal with the patient after discharge from the hospital | |
| Disruption of family life | The difficulty of caring for a COVID-19 patient, the tension in sharing family responsibilities, keeping other family members away from home, lack of enough space to allocate to the infected person, cleaning the bathroom after each use of the patient, continuous cleaning of the patient’s things | |
| Challenge of managing family members' behavior with the patient | Difficulty in managing and controlling other family members, especially children, for not communicating with the patient, emotional and irrational behavior of family members towards the patient, the contradiction of reason and feeling in the behavior of family members towards the patient | |
| Living with doubts and worries | Worry about the infection of other family members, worry about the infection of the caregiver, obsession with getting infected | |
| Challenges after a COVID-19 patient’s death | Incomplete farewell to the corpse | Not kissing the corpse, not touching the corpse, not seeing the corpse |
| The unbelievability of death | Not seeing the last moments of the dying patient, not believing the patient’s death, feeling sick and having nightmares about the patient’s death, not seeing the moments of burial | |
| Ambiguity and tension in the burial process | Lack of a coherent and unified plan for burial, ambiguity in how to deliver the body, confusion in how to bury it, family tensions over how to hold a mourning ceremony | |
| Lonely burial | The solitude of the burial, separation from the family, the absence of the Qur’an, etc., the absence of some family members in the burial ceremony, the lack of funeral, not holding the ceremonies of the seventh day and fortieth day | |
| Twinge of conscience | The twinge of conscience about the inadequacy of mourning, the twinge of conscience about the inadequacy of care, the twinge of conscience about not observing the will of the deceased about burial | |
| Worry about not respecting the deceased | Concern about people’s talk and sarcasm about the burial, mass burial of the dead, use of lime | |
| Incomplete condolence | Not hugging or kissing family members, not having all family members at home at the same time, and the absence of family elders with the deceased family incomplete condolence | |
| Abandonment | Lack of support and communication from the hospital with the family of the deceased, lack of support from relatives, lack of emotional support from governmental or non-governmental organizations |