Caregivers' Strengths-Skills: managing Older Cancer Patients' Symptoms

Authors
Category Primary study
Registry of Trialsclinicaltrials.gov
Year 2006
Cancer is one of the leading health disorders that can lead to impaired functioning and mortality in the elderly. With the aging of the population, more people will be living with a cancer diagnosis. The most dramatic increases will be among ethnic minorities. Advances in cancer detection and treatment are increasing cancer patients' survival and making it possible for many to be managed as outpatients and remain in the community. These advances have also contributed to an increased number of older adults living longer with/surviving for longer periods with having had cancer. Recognition of the centrality of families' role in patients' treatment and recovery is widespread. Less attention, however, has been focused on developing programs and interventions that include or target the families' role during the cancer survivorship period, a period when patients are coping with the consequences of cancer and its treatment. During this period, when contact with the health care system is less intense, cancer patients' symptoms may go unrecognized or be poorly managed. Family members are directly involved in health care decision‐making, functioning not only as a health care advocate for the elderly patient, but also ensuring that patients adhere to symptom management routines (e .g. encouraging them to take their pain medication, providing reassurance of the appropriateness of attending to certain symptoms). Family members' ongoing, frequent, contact with their elderly relative makes them ideally situated to monitor patients' functioning and detect subtle changes in their condition. The goal of the proposed study was to implement and evaluate the utility of a brief training program to support and enhance the problem‐solving caregiving skills of familial caregivers to facilitate optimum symptom control for older cancer patients during the post‐treatment period. The rationale for this approach is based upon a diverse body of theoretical and empirical work. It represents a distillation and consolidation of research on cancer and the family, and draws from the broader bodies of work on disease management in the elderly, disparities in health care, cultural perspectives on illness, family caregiving in chronic disease, health behavior, health education and emerging approaches in palliative care. Given the challenges patients and families may be experiencing during the post treatment period, ethical considerations mandated some type of service provision for the comparison condition. It was necessary to select an intervention that would be of potential benefit to the caregiver and/or the elderly patient, but would not necessarily be expected to directly impact the caregiver skills targeted in the Problem‐solving condition. These considerations led to the selection of a caregiver support program as an acceptable comparison condition. This investigation addresses a significant gap in the caregiver literature. While there is widespread recognition of the centrality of the family's role in long‐term care situations, little attention has been focused on the post‐treatment period. Programs that can empower familial caregivers and enhance their problem‐solving strengths may enable them to be more effective in managing their relatives' care needs.
Epistemonikos ID: 838237e1af91301d317cbab8cbb2bf00c1ef056b
First added on: May 21, 2024