Author:
Walsh Kiri,Jones Louise,Tookman Adrian,Mason Christina,McLoughlin Joanne,Blizard Robert,King Michael
Abstract
BackgroundCaring for relatives with advanced cancer may cause psychological and
physical ill health.AimsTo evaluate the effectiveness of increased support for distressed,
informal carers of patients receiving palliative care.MethodThe sample was composed of 271 informal carers who scored over 5 on the
28-item General Health Questionnaire (GHQ-28). The intervention comprised
six weekly visits by a trained advisor. Primary outcome was carer
distress (GHQ-28) at 4-week, 9-week and 12-week follow-up. Secondary
outcomes were carer strain and quality of life, satisfaction with care,
and bereavement outcome.ResultsScores on the GHQ-28 fell below the threshold of 5/6 in a third of
participants in each trial arm at any follow-up point. Mean scores in the
intervention group were lower at all time points but these differences
were not significant. No difference was observed in secondary outcomes.
Carers receiving the intervention reported qualitative benefit.ConclusionsThe intervention might have been too brief, and ongoing help might have
had accruing benefits. Alternatively, informal carers of patients with
cancer may already receive considerable input and the advisor's help gave
little additional advantage; or caring for a dying relative is extremely
stressful and no amount of support is going to make it much better.
Publisher
Royal College of Psychiatrists
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health
Cited by
84 articles.
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