Easing Distress in Caregivers of Dying Patients
By Patricia McAdams, Contributing Writer
Research Source: The Cochrane Library
Health Behavior News Service
June 17, 2011--Interventions can buffer caregivers of
terminally ill patients from the significant stresses they face in providing
care to a loved one, a new evidence review finds.
Lead review author Bridget Candy said that the caregiving of terminally ill
patients, both with cancer and with other advanced diseases, is of
considerable interest to Marie Curie Cancer Care — the main charity
providing palliative care in the UK. Candy, a senior research associate at
the Marie Curie group at University College Medical School in London, and
her colleagues analyzed 11 randomized controlled trials comprising 1,836
participants who were informal caregivers.
“These trials varied in the types of interventions they provided, how they
provided them and what they measured,” Candy said. “We found, however, that
when we combined the eight clinical trials that directly supported
caregivers, these interventions appeared to help buffer a caregiver or
family member from extreme psychological distress.
“Caregivers who received the intervention had a marginally better quality of
life and marginally increased ability to cope with their caring role,” she
added. “In future work, it would be most useful to explore which components
of interventions are key and which are not needed.”
According to the National Alliance for Caregiving, almost one of every three
Americans spends an average of 20 hours a week providing care for a loved
one, because of chronic illness or some other disability.
Regrettably, Candy could not comment on which interventions were most
helpful. This is because the specific interventions in this review were
variable, multi-component interventions, involving possible components such
as education, emotional support, grief therapy and well-being advice. Nurses
provided most of the interventions. None of the studies examined practical
domestic support or financial support and few of the studies looked at the
physical health of those who delivered care.
The review appears in the June issue of The Cochrane Library, a publication
of The Cochrane Collaboration, an international organization that evaluates
research in all aspects of health care. Systematic reviews draw
evidence-based conclusions about medical practice after considering both the
content and quality of existing trials on a topic.
With the exception of two clinical trials that date back to 1984 and 1992,
all randomized controlled trials took place over the past six years in the
UK, Australia or the United States.
While none of the trials purposely set out to look for negative outcomes,
Candy and her colleagues learned of one study in which participants received
family-focused grief therapy. A year after the intervention, one subgroup of
families receiving this therapy, classed by the researchers as “hostile,”
reported increased family conflicts.
Candy is uncertain why this might have happened, especially given that a
one-year follow-up is a long time. “It’s something that needs to be further
investigated, however,” she said.
According to Candy, this review has clear implications for physicians and
other health care providers. “Our findings suggest that, at the very least,
health care practitioners should inquire about the concerns of family and
friends involved in caring for a loved one and should consider that they may
benefit from additional support to help them cope with caring.”
Carolyn Messner – a clinical social worker and director of education and
training at CancerCare, a national nonprofit organization that provides free
professional support services for anyone affected by cancer – said that the
review authors conducted rigorous research on studies aiming to assess the
effects of practical and psychosocial interventions to assist caregivers to
cope.
“As evidence-based researchers, they posed important questions for future
research, including the need to evaluate practical support interventions, as
well as those addressing health service use and psychological health,”
Messner said.
Messner — who specializes in the psychosocial impact of cancer on patients,
caregivers and families — said that the authors did not address the need to
conduct longitudinal studies of caregivers to learn what interventions have
the greatest efficacy over the long haul, which merits careful intervention
studies.
“Most caregivers survive long after their loved one dies,” she said. “We
want to tease out what is most helpful as interventions for these
caregivers’ future coping and health status.”