癌症患者家庭护理人员的临床评估和支持:可行性研究结果

Cancer care research online Pub Date : 2023-10-01 Epub Date: 2023-08-16 DOI:10.1097/cr9.0000000000000047
Madhuvanthi Suresh, Rashmi Risbud, Manali I Patel, Karl A Lorenz, Lidia Schapira, Dolores Gallagher-Thompson, Ranak Trivedi
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引用次数: 0

摘要

癌症护理工作因其独特的需求而繁重,这突出了评估护理人员痛苦的重要性。护理人员经常陪同患者进行医疗保健访问,为在患者护理点完成痛苦筛查提供机会。评估在患者护理点进行护理人员痛苦筛查并实施护理人员心理教育课程的可行性。我们找到了癌症门诊候诊室的护理人员。参与者完成了抑郁、负担、焦虑、生活质量和压力测量。为那些达到抑郁症和/或负担临床临界值的人提供了心理教育课程。50名护理人员完成了1+测量;然而,由于不完整的同意文件,报告了23名护理人员的研究结果。共有22%的护理人员抑郁症筛查呈阳性,30%的护理人员负担呈阳性,70%的护理人员焦虑呈阳性。超过一半的人将压力评为中等或更高。心理健康状况略低于普通人群。超过75%的人在1+痛苦测量中筛查呈阳性。在9名因抑郁和/或负担而达到临界值的护理人员中,有两名(22%)接受了心理教育课程。护理人员在患者就诊期间适度接受痛苦筛查,但由于时间限制和隐私问题,不太愿意参加心理教育课程。评估照顾者的痛苦可以促进转介支持性服务。在患者护理之外为护理人员提供心理教育干预可能是不可接受的。未来的研究可能会评估将常规护理人员筛查纳入患者护理,以促进对心理健康服务的参与。这项研究提供了一种独特的方法来评估癌症护理人员的痛苦。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Clinic-based Assessment and Support for Family Caregivers of Patients With Cancer: Results of a Feasibility Study.

Background: Cancer caregiving is burdensome with unique needs, highlighting the importance of assessing caregivers' distress. Caregivers often accompany patients to healthcare visits, presenting an opportunity to complete distress screening at patients' point-of-care.

Objective: To evaluate the feasibility of caregiver distress screening at patients' point-of-care and implementing a caregiver psychoeducational session.

Methods: We approached caregivers in outpatient cancer clinic waiting rooms. Participants completed depression, burden, anxiety, quality of life, and stress measures. A psychoeducational session with a psychologist was offered to those meeting clinical cutoffs for depression and/or burden. Fifty caregivers completed 1+ measure; however, due to incomplete consent documentation, findings from 23 caregivers are reported.

Results: 22% of caregivers screened positive for depression, 30% burden, and 70% anxiety. More than half rated stress as moderate or higher. Mental wellbeing was slightly below that of the general population. More than 75% screened positive on 1+ distress measure. Of the 9 caregivers who met cutoffs for depression and/or burden, two (22%) accepted the psychoeducational session.

Conclusion: Caregivers were moderately receptive to distress screening during patients' visits, but were less receptive to engaging in the psychoeducational session due to time constraints and privacy concerns.

Implications for practice: Assessing caregivers' distress can facilitate referrals for supportive services. Offering caregivers psychoeducational intervention outside of patient care may not be acceptable. Future research may evaluate the integration of routine caregiver screening within patient care to promote engagement with mental health services.

Foundational: This research offers a unique method of assessing cancer caregivers' distress.

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