Palliative Care for Caregiver Distress

by Sujin Ann-YiAccording to theCaregiving in the US 2015 research report (PDF) conducted by the National Alliance for Caregiving (NAC) and American Association of Retired Persons (AARP), 43.5 million adults in the US have provided uncompensated care to an adult or a child in the past year. The same report found caregivers provide on average 24.4 hours per week of support to their family member. Spouses were found to provide on average 44.6 hours per week and almost 25% of caregivers provide 41 hours per week.Caregivers refers to family members who provide ongoing continuous care, typically without any compensation, for those with serious health issues such as cancer. Family caregivers provide significant support to patients which includes but is not limited to physical, psychological, spiritual, and emotional support as well as communicating with health providers, treatment monitoring, administering drugs and medical treatments, and advocating for their loved ones (Caregiving in the U.S., 2015).Caregiver distress results when caregivers have overwhelming demands and unmet needs, coupled with other stressors such as feeling isolated, feeling burdened, financial strains, negative emotions, and work loss. A positive correlation has been reported between cancer patients ’ and their respective caregivers’ distress (Hodges, Humphries, Macfarlane, 2005). Caregivers are at risk in developing both depression and anxiety as well as consequences to their own health (Nipp, El-Ja...
Source: Pallimed: A Hospice and Palliative Medicine Blog - Category: Palliative Care Tags: ann-yi anxiety cancer caregiving depression tweetchat twitter Source Type: blogs
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