The Lived Experience of Informal Caregivers of People Who Have Severe Mental Illness and Coexisting Long‐Term Conditions: A Qualitative Study

Author:

Carswell C.1ORCID,Brown J. V. E.1ORCID,Shiers D.234,Ajjan R.5ORCID,Balogun‐Katung A.6,Bellass S.7ORCID,Holt R. I. G.89ORCID,Jacobs R.10ORCID,Kellar I.11ORCID,Lewisohn C.12,Lister J.1,Siddiqi N.11314ORCID,Sidorova I.12,Coventry P.115ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Health Sciences University of York York UK

2. Psychosis Research Unit Greater Manchester Mental Health NHS Trust Manchester UK

3. Division of Psychology and Mental Health University of Manchester Manchester UK

4. School of Medicine Keele University Staffordshire UK

5. Clinical and Population Sciences Department, Leeds Institute for Cardiovascular and Metabolic Medicine University of Leeds Leeds UK

6. Population Health Sciences Institute, Faculty of Medical Sciences Newcastle University Newcastle UK

7. Department of Sport and Exercise Sciences Manchester Metropolitan University Manchester UK

8. Human Development and Health, Faculty of Medicine University of Southampton Southampton UK

9. National Institute for Health Research Biomedical Research Centre University Hospital Southampton NHS Foundation Trust Southampton UK

10. Centre for Health Economics University of York York UK

11. Department of Psychology University of Sheffield Sheffield UK

12. DIAMONDS Voice DIAMONDS Programme Patient and Public Involvement Panel York UK

13. Bradford District Care NHS Foundation Trust Bradford UK

14. Centre for Health and Population Sciences Hull York Medical School York UK

15. York Environmental Sustainability Institute University of York York UK

Abstract

ABSTRACTBackgroundPeople with severe mental illness (SMI) experience higher rates and poorer outcomes of physical long‐term conditions (LTCs). The management of SMI and LTCs is highly complex and many people with SMI rely on informal carers for support, which may lead to high levels of caregiver burden, and caregiver burnout. Caregiver burnout can result in poor health outcomes for informal carers and a reduction in the quality of care they are able to provide. Therefore, it is important to understand the caring experience to identify and address factors that contribute to burden and burnout.MethodsThis paper reports a secondary qualitative analysis of semistructured interviews and focus groups conducted with informal carers of people who have coexisting SMI and LTCs. We recruited 12 informal carers in England between December 2018 and April 2019. The transcripts were coded and analysed thematically.ResultsWe identified two overarching themes and five subthemes. The themes included ‘Fighting on all fronts: Mounting strain between demands and resources’, which described the challenge of providing care in the context of coexisting SMI and LTCs, and ‘Safekeeping: The necessity of chronic hypervigilance’, which captured how informal carers' roles were defined by managing high‐risk situations, leading to hypervigilance and paternalistic approaches to care.ConclusionThe experience of informal carers for people with SMI and coexisting LTCs is marked by limited access to support and the management of significant risk, which could contribute to high caregiver burden. Further primary research is needed to understand how the experiences of the caregiver role for people with SMI and LTCs influence caregiver burden.Patient or Public ContributionOur PPI panel DIAMONDS Voice provided guidance on this study from conception, design and development of interview guides and recruitment materials to final write‐up. DIAMONDS Voice consists of service users and carers who have experience of SMI and LTCs. Three carer members reviewed the final manuscript, and two are credited as authors.

Publisher

Wiley

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