Vaughan Christine, Trail Thomas E, Mahmud Ammarah, Dellva Stephanie, Tanielian Terri, Friedman Esther
RAND Corporation, San Francisco, CA, United States.
RAND Corporation, Arlington, VA, United States.
J Med Internet Res. 2018 Aug 28;20(8):e257. doi: 10.2196/jmir.9895.
Web-based peer support interventions have shown promise in reducing social isolation and social support deficits among informal caregivers, but little research has examined how caregivers use and perceive these interventions.
In this study, we examined utilization and perceptions of a Web-based social support intervention for informal caregivers of wounded, ill, and injured United States military service members and veterans.
This was a mixed-methods study that used quantitative survey data and qualitative data from focus groups and interviews with informal caregivers enrolled in a Web-based peer support intervention to explore their use and perceptions of the intervention. The intervention was delivered via a website that featured interest groups organized around specific topics, webinars, webchats, and messaging functionality and was moderated by professionally trained peers. This study occurred in the context of a quasi-experimental outcome evaluation of the intervention, where intervention participants were compared with a group of military caregivers who were not enrolled in the intervention.
Survey findings indicated that caregivers used the website infrequently, with 60.7% (128/211) visiting the website once a month or less, and passively, with a minority (32/144, 22.2%) of users (ie, those who had visited the website at least once during the past 3 months, N=144) posting comments or links to the network. Nonetheless, most users (121/144, 84.0%) endorsed moderate or greater satisfaction with the website on the survey, and focus group and interview participants reported benefiting sufficiently from passive use of the website (eg, reading posts). Quantitative and qualitative findings suggested that users viewed the website primarily as a source of informational support. Among 63.2% (91/144) of users who completed the survey, the most commonly reported network-related activity was obtaining information from the network's resource library, and focus group and interview participants viewed the network primarily as an informational resource. Focus group and interview participants expressed an unmet need for emotional support and the desire for a more personal touch in the forms of more active engagement with other caregivers in the network and the creation of local, in-person support groups for caregivers.
These findings suggest that Web-based peer support interventions may lend themselves better to the provision of informational (vs emotional) support and may need to be supplemented by in-person peer support groups to better meet caregivers' needs for emotional support.
基于网络的同伴支持干预措施在减少非正式照护者的社会隔离和社会支持不足方面显示出了前景,但很少有研究探讨照护者如何使用和看待这些干预措施。
在本研究中,我们调查了针对美国受伤、患病和受伤军人及退伍军人的非正式照护者的基于网络的社会支持干预措施的使用情况和看法。
这是一项混合方法研究,使用了定量调查数据以及来自焦点小组和对参与基于网络的同伴支持干预措施的非正式照护者的访谈的定性数据,以探讨他们对该干预措施的使用和看法。该干预措施通过一个网站提供,该网站设有围绕特定主题组织的兴趣小组、网络研讨会、网络聊天和消息功能,并由经过专业培训的同伴进行管理。本研究是在对该干预措施的准实验性结果评估的背景下进行的,将干预措施参与者与一组未参与该干预措施的军人照护者进行了比较。
调查结果表明,照护者很少使用该网站,60.7%(128/211)的人每月访问该网站一次或更少,且使用方式较为被动,只有少数用户(32/144,22.2%)(即那些在过去3个月内至少访问过该网站一次的用户,N = 144)在网络上发布评论或链接。尽管如此,大多数用户(121/144,84.0%)在调查中对该网站表示中度或更高程度的满意,焦点小组和访谈参与者报告称从被动使用该网站(如阅读帖子)中充分受益。定量和定性研究结果表明,用户主要将该网站视为信息支持的来源。在完成调查的63.2%(91/|144)的用户中,最常报告的与网络相关的活动是从网络资源库获取信息,焦点小组和访谈参与者主要将该网络视为信息资源。焦点小组和访谈参与者表示情感支持需求未得到满足,并且希望通过与网络中的其他照护者进行更积极的互动以及为照护者创建本地面对面支持小组等形式获得更个性化的关怀。
这些研究结果表明,基于网络的同伴支持干预措施可能更适合提供信息(而非情感)支持,可能需要通过面对面的同伴支持小组进行补充,以更好地满足照护者对情感支持的需求。