Home Hospice Family Caregivers' Use of Audio Diaries and Reported Prevalence of Patient and Caregiver Symptoms.

Autor: Cloyes KG; Oregon Health and Science University (K.G.C., S.J.R.), Portland, Oregon. Electronic address: cloyes@ohsu.edu., Thomas Hebdon MC; University of Texas at Austin (M.C.T.H.), Austin, Texas., Vega M; University of Utah (M.V., D.T., K.M., L.E.), Salt Lake City, Utah., Rosenkranz SJ; Oregon Health and Science University (K.G.C., S.J.R.), Portland, Oregon., Tay D; University of Utah (M.V., D.T., K.M., L.E.), Salt Lake City, Utah., Reblin M; University of Vermont (M.R.), Burlington, Vermont., Mooney K; University of Utah (M.V., D.T., K.M., L.E.), Salt Lake City, Utah., Ellington L; University of Utah (M.V., D.T., K.M., L.E.), Salt Lake City, Utah.
Jazyk: angličtina
Zdroj: Journal of pain and symptom management [J Pain Symptom Manage] 2023 Mar; Vol. 65 (3), pp. 183-192. Date of Electronic Publication: 2022 Dec 07.
DOI: 10.1016/j.jpainsymman.2022.11.023
Abstrakt: Context: Family caregivers are essential to home hospice care for patients with advanced cancer, including reporting patient symptoms to hospice providers for follow-up. Hospice caregiving can also impact personal well-being.
Objectives: 1) Assess home hospice caregivers' use of prospective, longitudinal audio diaries tracking patient and caregiver wellbeing; 2) Explore how patient-focused vs. caregiver-focused diary prompts perform; 3) Examine the prevalence of interactive voice response (IVR)-tracked symptoms and whether diaries revealed additional symptoms.
Methods: Caregivers (N=102) were asked to report patient and caregiver symptoms via daily IVR calls and could record optional diaries responding to patient-focused or caregiver-focused prompts. Diaries were transcribed, classified by presence/absence of new information, and compared by prompt type. Content coding for IVR-tracked symptoms and inductive coding for additional symptoms were summarized by frequency counts and exemplary quotes.
Results: Sixty-nine percent of participants (n=70) recorded diaries, and of these 72.86% (n=51) recorded ≥ one new-information diary. The median recording length was 53.00 seconds (SD=53.36). Participants responding to the caregiver-focused prompt (n=33) recorded more diaries than those in the patient-focused group (n=37; U=437.500, P=0.04. Most prevalent IVR-tracked symptoms were patient fatigue/weakness (26.54% of symptoms mentioned) and pain (23.08%), and caregiver anxiety/nervousness (47.51%) and fatigue (22.10%). The most prevalent additional symptoms were patient increasing sleepiness/sleeping (26.32%) and breathing difficulties (24.32%), and negative caregiver emotions (e.g., guilt, resentment, anger; 29.17%).
Conclusion: Prospective audio diaries offer a viable avenue for communicating symptoms and support needs. Future research will focus on leveraging longitudinal data for developing focused and tailored caregiver support interventions.
(Copyright © 2022 American Academy of Hospice and Palliative Medicine. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
Databáze: MEDLINE