Assessing the Comprehensive Training Needs of Informal Caregivers of Cancer Patients: A Qualitative Study
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
3. Results
3.1. Participant Characteristics
3.2. Thematic Analysis
3.2.1. Caregiver Preparedness and Duties
“(My caregiver looked after) Making sure I had the proper appointments, the medication ready, hooking me up to the G-tube, ensuring my feeding was on track. Driving me to my appointments.”
“There’s no way of knowing this (i.e., the knowledge required to be a caregiver). There’s no way of reading about it that can prepare you because I believe every patient is unique and different. And so, their needs are different at any given moment in the day.”
“I would have liked to have known a bit more before. I was sort of learning along with him [i.e., the patient] and it probably would have been helpful if I had known some things ahead of time to reassure him or help him go through the information because I’d already heard it, or knew of it, or talked about it.”
“Patients (are) going through a lot … but not everyone (patients) is that good at active listening these days,”as one CG put it.
“Caregivers really put themselves at the end of the road. They put themselves last and like the, you know…you don’t even know that you need help because you’re so entrenched and involved. (Because you want) to do right by the person you love, by your friends, your family, your neighbor, you know, whoever you’re caregiving and you want to be optimistic. And then, you know, you’re the last one in your own mind, because you think that’s the right thing to do, or you just get so swept up that you forget about you.”
3.2.2. Information Seeking and the Impact of Emotion on Learning
“Well, you have to understand that you always think it’s a death sentence when you hear that word (cancer), you don’t think that no matter what people say to you, it is a horrible word. So, you have to figure when you first find out, you just think that this is over because you don’t hear a lot of success. You don’t hear the, the success stories, you only unfortunately hear the worst. So that’s where I struggled when I first found out.”
“So, my doctor gave me a package and the nurse said, I’d like you to read everything and look everything up. And I looked one thing up and then I closed the package and I went, ‘nope’, because I found I got high, high anxiety,” one patient explained.
“So, it really is a learning curve for caregivers. There’s no way to understand what this means. If no one sits down with you, throwing someone a welcome package with a bunch of information that may or not transpire in the life of the patient, it means nothing… it’s the caregiver that needs their hand held through the process.”
“So, to me to be clear, I only researched questions that we should be asking when the doctors sent information home… I researched, you know, keywords and documents that they provided. So that way we understood what was being provided to us. But I know from my sister’s experience that, you know, doctors discourage people from going on the Internet and doing a whole bunch of their own research and [therefore I used] the doctor as really the conduit to gain information. So, my research was more about getting clarity about what the doctors provided. And I did find a couple of blog sites for men who had experienced the same type of cancer to get an understanding of what they experienced and questions that they asked and stuff like that.”
“Some people just sort of leave everything to the doctors and don’t wanna know what’s going on. But I really wanted to know so I hopped on to Google and, you know, try to learn copious amounts information and like really quickly. And then I just talked to the doctors once I arrive(d).”
3.2.3. CG Need for Peer Social Supports
“The fact that they’ve been diagnosed with cancer is itself such a shock. And it’s hard to wrap their minds around the possibility that they could survive it.”
“It’s never ending and, it’s like bad news after bad news and you say, ‘okay, when is it going to stop?’ And if it’s going to stop or are we going to find a treatment to heal or at least to help you… you have pretty dark images in your head and even if you don’t want to get there, you go there.”
3.3. Curriculum Feedback
“I really don’t know how to motivate them. Like if it was something like that for myself, I would definitely (take it). I didn’t need to be motivated. I would definitely participate. I would definitely take the course. I mean, it depends on the individual, how involved they want to be.”
4. Discussion
Strengths and Limitations
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Variable | Patient | Caregiver |
---|---|---|
Age (mean; range) | 53.8; 43–70 | 53.1; 29–71 |
Gender | 4–Males 2–Females | 5–Males 2–Females |
Race/Ethnicity | 5–White/Caucasian/European 1–Other (“biracial–black Caribbean and white Canadian” | 5–White/Caucasian/European 1–Arab/west-Asian 1–Other (“half white/Asian”) |
Highest level of schooling completed | 4–college/university 1–high school 1–post-graduate school | 5–college/university 1–post-graduate school |
Household income in the last year * | 3–More than CAD 100,000 1–CAD 80,000–99,999 1– < CAD 400,000 1–Prefer not to say | 3–More than CAD 100,000 1 CAD 80,000–99,999 2–CAD 60,000–79,999 1–CAD 40,000–59,999 |
Marital status | 2–Single, never married 4–Married, common law | 2–Single, never married 3–Married, common law |
Main work-related activity | 3–Getting disability payment 2–Working (part-time or full-time) 1–Other (retired) | 5–Working (part-time or full-time) 1–Unemployed 1–Other (retired) |
Living arrangements | 1–Alone 4–With partner 2–With children | 1–Alone1–With roommates 2–With parents 2–With partner 1–With children |
Cancer type | 5–Head and Neck (nose, mouth, throat) 1–Other (breast and thyroid) | 6–Head and Neck (nose, mouth, throat) 1–Other (breast) |
Treatments received | 2–Surgery 5–Radiation 4–Chemotherapy | 2–Surgery 6–Radiation 4–Chemotherapy |
Health literacy score (mean) | 45.8/64 | 52.7/64 |
Computer literacy score (mean) | 42.7/48 | 46.7/48 |
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Papadakos, J.; Ugas, M.; Quartey, N.K.; Papadakos, C.; Giuliani, M.E. Assessing the Comprehensive Training Needs of Informal Caregivers of Cancer Patients: A Qualitative Study. Curr. Oncol. 2023, 30, 3845-3858. https://doi.org/10.3390/curroncol30040291
Papadakos J, Ugas M, Quartey NK, Papadakos C, Giuliani ME. Assessing the Comprehensive Training Needs of Informal Caregivers of Cancer Patients: A Qualitative Study. Current Oncology. 2023; 30(4):3845-3858. https://doi.org/10.3390/curroncol30040291
Chicago/Turabian StylePapadakos, Janet, Mohamed Ugas, Naa Kwarley Quartey, Christine (Tina) Papadakos, and Meredith Elana Giuliani. 2023. "Assessing the Comprehensive Training Needs of Informal Caregivers of Cancer Patients: A Qualitative Study" Current Oncology 30, no. 4: 3845-3858. https://doi.org/10.3390/curroncol30040291
APA StylePapadakos, J., Ugas, M., Quartey, N. K., Papadakos, C., & Giuliani, M. E. (2023). Assessing the Comprehensive Training Needs of Informal Caregivers of Cancer Patients: A Qualitative Study. Current Oncology, 30(4), 3845-3858. https://doi.org/10.3390/curroncol30040291