Caregivers of Patients with Hematological Malignancies within Home Care: A Phenomenological Study
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Setting and Sampling
2.2. Data Collection
2.3. Data Analysis
2.4. Bracketing, Reflexivity, and Rigor
2.5. Ethical Considerations
3. Results
3.1. Feeling Connected with the Patient
3.2. Experiencing the Path with Fatigue
3.3. Perceiving Home Care as an Opportunity
3.4. Feeling the Support from HPs
3.5. Developing a Sense of Self-Efficacy
4. Discussion
Strengths and Limitations
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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The hospital hematologists wrote guidelines for the management of blood and platelet transfusions, administration of intravenous and subcutaneous chemotherapy, and the management of clinical complications before the HHC service started. The HHC team involves one hematologist trained in palliative care and one nurse with expertise in the management of hematological patients and palliative care. Both cooperate with hospital professionals. The HHC service operates jointly with primary care doctors. |
Screening |
The hospital hematologists recommend the HHC service to patients based on the following criteria:
|
Activities (abstract from guidelines) |
The staff should provide all the required information, both during the first visit at home and during the assistance. In particular, the nurse provides training moments about hygiene practices, assessment of vital parameters, caring of venous catheters and urinary catheters, wound dressing, management and prevention of constipation. For severe cases (terminal illness, symptoms as bleeding, dyspnea, vomit, breakthrough pain, and delirium), caregivers are trained to administer drugs, based on anticipatory prescriptions. The hematologist can be contacted by telephone 24 h a day. Chemotherapy offered comprises subcutaneous and intramuscular injections and intravenous treatments with one or two drugs. The hematologist and the nurse remain at the patient’s home throughout the chemotherapy infusion |
Foci | Exemplifying Question(s) |
---|---|
Starting | “Thank you for participating. I would like to ask you if the reason we are here is clear? Are there any questions you wish to ask me? Are there any doubts that you want me to clarify?” |
The experience of returning to domestic life after the hospital discharge | “Could you please tell me what you thought when healthcare professionals offered home care to your loved-one?” |
The emotional experience of assisting the loved one at home | “Could you please tell me how you experienced the care of your loved one? What was your experience of assisting your loved one?” |
The experience of intra-family organizational changes | “Could you please tell me how was your daily life? Could you please tell me how your organization was?” |
Actions related to the end of life of the patient | “Could you please tell me what happened at home in the last few days?” |
The emotional aspects related to the end of life of the patient at home | “Could you please tell me how you did feel about managing your loved one’s last moments at home?” |
Conclusion | “Is there any other though you would like to share? Anything to add?” |
Code | Age Range | Occupation | Education | The CG is the Patient’s | The CG was |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1PF | 61–70 | Retired | Secondary | Wife | Alone |
2PF | 61–70 | Teacher | Tertiary | Daughter | Alone |
3PF | 41–50 | Employee | Secondary | Daughter | Alone |
4PPFF | 61–70 | Unemployed | Primary | Wife | Helped by the daughter |
4PPFF | 31–40 | Employee | Secondary | Daughter | Helped by the mother |
5PM | 41–50 | Sport trainer | Tertiary | Son | Helped by the brother |
6PF | 61–70 | Retired | Tertiary | Wife | Helped by children |
7PF | 51–60 | Un-employed | Secondary | Daughter | Helped by siblings |
8PF | 50 | Un-employed | Secondary | Wife | Alone |
9PF | 51–60 | Employee | Secondary | Daughter | Helped by in-home assistant |
10PM | 61–70 | Retired | Secondary | Husband | Helped by the daughter |
11PF | 41–50 | Employee | Secondary | Daughter | Helped by the mother |
12PM | 41–50 | Employee | Secondary | Son | Helped by the father |
13PPMM | 31–40 | Researcher | Tertiary | Son | Helped by the father |
13PPMM | 61–70 | Retired | Secondary | Husband | Helped by the son |
14PPFM | <71 | Retired | Primary | Wife | Helped by the son |
14PPFM | 51–60 | Employee | Secondary | Son | Helped by the mother |
Main Themes | Sub-Themes |
---|---|
Feeling connected with the patient | Feeling the strength of the loved-one |
Accepting the patient’s wishes | |
Participating the care | |
Experiencing the path with fatigue | Feeling the burden |
Neglecting themselves | |
Needing relief | |
Perceiving home care as an opportunity | Preserving normal life |
Strengthening family bonds | |
Making a gift to the loved-one | |
Feeling the support from HPs | Perceiving home care as necessary |
Feeling the professionalism and prompt availability | |
Comfort and sense of familiarity | |
Developing a sense of self-efficacy | Spirit of initiative |
Building determination |
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Capodanno, I.; Rocchi, M.; Prandi, R.; Pedroni, C.; Tamagnini, E.; Alfieri, P.; Merli, F.; Ghirotto, L. Caregivers of Patients with Hematological Malignancies within Home Care: A Phenomenological Study. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2020, 17, 4036. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17114036
Capodanno I, Rocchi M, Prandi R, Pedroni C, Tamagnini E, Alfieri P, Merli F, Ghirotto L. Caregivers of Patients with Hematological Malignancies within Home Care: A Phenomenological Study. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2020; 17(11):4036. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17114036
Chicago/Turabian StyleCapodanno, Isabella, Mirta Rocchi, Rossella Prandi, Cristina Pedroni, Enrica Tamagnini, Pierluigi Alfieri, Francesco Merli, and Luca Ghirotto. 2020. "Caregivers of Patients with Hematological Malignancies within Home Care: A Phenomenological Study" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 17, no. 11: 4036. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17114036
APA StyleCapodanno, I., Rocchi, M., Prandi, R., Pedroni, C., Tamagnini, E., Alfieri, P., Merli, F., & Ghirotto, L. (2020). Caregivers of Patients with Hematological Malignancies within Home Care: A Phenomenological Study. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 17(11), 4036. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17114036