Corry Margarita, Neenan Kathleen, Brabyn Sally, Sheaf Greg, Smith Valerie
School of Nursing and Midwifery, Trinity College Dublin, Dublin, Ireland.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2019 May 14;5(5):CD012533. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD012533.pub2.
Maintaining care for ill persons in the community is heavily dependent on support from unpaid caregivers. Many caregivers, however, find themselves in a caring role for which they are ill prepared and may require professional support. The telephone is an easily accessible method of providing support irrespective of geographical location.
The objective of this review was to evaluate the effectiveness of telephone support interventions, delivered by healthcare professionals, when compared to usual care or non-telephone-based support interventions for providing education and psychosocial support for informal caregivers of people with acute and chronic diagnosed illnesses, and to evaluate the cost-effectiveness of telephone interventions in this population.
We searched the following databases from inception to 16 November 2018: the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL); MEDLINE; Embase; PsycINFO; ProQuest Dissertations and Theses A&I; and CINAHL Complete. We also searched 11 caregiver-specific websites, three conference links, and two clinical trial registries.
We included randomised controlled trials (RCTs) (including cluster-RCTs) and quasi-RCTs. We excluded cross-over trials because of the high risk of carry-over effects from one intervention to another.
Two authors independently screened citations against the review's inclusion criteria, extracted data, and assessed the included studies using the Cochrane 'Risk of bias' tool. The review's prespecified primary (quality of life and burden) and secondary outcomes (skill acquisition, psychological health, knowledge, health status and well-being, family functioning, satisfaction, and economic outcomes), where reported, were assessed at the end of intervention delivery and at short-term (≤ 3 months), medium-term (> 3 to ≤ 6 months) and longer-term time points (> 6 to 12 months) following the intervention. Where possible, meta-analyses were conducted, otherwise results were reported narratively.
We included 21 randomised studies involving 1,690 caregivers; 19 studies compared telephone support interventions and usual care, of which 18 contributed data to the analyses. Two studies compared telephone and non-telephone professional support interventions. Caregiver ages ranged from 19 years to 87 years across studies. The majority of participants were female (> 70.53%), with two trials including females only. Most caregivers were family members, educated beyond secondary or high school level or had the equivalent in years of education. All caregivers were based in the community. Overall risk of bias was high for most studies.The results demonstrated that there is probably little or no difference between telephone support interventions and usual care for the primary outcome of quality of life at the end of intervention (SMD -0.02, 95% CI -0.24 to 0.19, 4 studies, 364 caregivers) (moderate-certainty evidence) or burden at the end of intervention (SMD -0.11, 95% CI -0.30 to 0.07, 9 studies, 788 caregivers) (low-certainty evidence). For one study where quality of life at the end of intervention was reported narratively, the findings indicated that a telephone support intervention may result in slightly higher quality of life, compared with usual care. Two further studies on caregiver burden were reported narratively; one reported that telephone support interventions may decrease burden, the other reported no change in the intervention group, compared with usual care.We are uncertain about the effects of telephone support interventions on caregiver depression at the end of intervention (SMD -0.37, 95% CI -0.70 to -0.05, 9 studies, 792 caregivers) due to very low-certainty evidence for this outcome. Depression was reported narratively for three studies. One reported that the intervention may reduce caregiver depression at the end of intervention, but this effect was not sustained at short-term follow-up. The other two studies reported there may be little or no difference between telephone support and usual care for depression at the end of intervention. Six studies measured satisfaction with the intervention but did not report comparative data. All six reported high satisfaction scores with the intervention. No adverse events, including suicide or suicide ideation, were measured or reported by any of the included studies.Our analysis indicated that caregiver anxiety may be slightly reduced (MD -6.0, 95% CI -11.68 to -0.32, 1 study, 61 caregivers) and preparedness to care slightly improved (SMD 0.37, 95% CI 0.09 to 0.64, 2 studies, 208 caregivers) at the end of intervention, following telephone-only support interventions compared to usual care. Findings indicated there may be little or no difference between telephone support interventions and usual care for all of the following outcomes at the end of intervention: problem-solving, social activity, caregiver competence, coping, stress, knowledge, physical health, self-efficacy, family functioning, and satisfaction with supports (practical or social). There may also be little or no effect of telephone support interventions for quality of life and burden at short-term follow-up or for burden and depression at medium-term follow-up.Litttle or no difference was found between groups for any of the reported outcomes in studies comparing telephone and non-telephone professional support interventions. We are uncertain as to the effects of telephone support interventions compared to non-telephone support interventions for caregiver burden and depression at the end of intervention. No study reported on quality of life or satisfaction with the intervention and no adverse events were reported or noted in the two studies reporting on this comparison.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: Although our review indicated slight benefit may exist for telephone support interventions on some outcomes (e.g. anxiety and preparedness to care at the end of intervention), for most outcomes, including the primary outcomes, telephone-only interventions may have little or no effect on caregiver outcomes compared to usual care. The findings of the review were mainly based on studies with overall high risk of bias, and few participants. Further high-quality trials, with larger sample sizes are required.
在社区中为患病者提供护理严重依赖无偿护理人员的支持。然而,许多护理人员发现自己承担的护理角色让他们准备不足,可能需要专业支持。电话是一种无论地理位置如何都易于获得的提供支持的方式。
本综述的目的是评估与常规护理或非电话支持干预相比,由医疗保健专业人员提供的电话支持干预对急性和慢性确诊疾病患者的非正式护理人员提供教育和心理社会支持的有效性,并评估电话干预在该人群中的成本效益。
我们检索了以下数据库,从数据库建立至2018年11月16日:Cochrane对照试验中央注册库(CENTRAL);MEDLINE;Embase;PsycINFO;ProQuest学位论文与综合文摘数据库;以及护理学与健康领域数据库(CINAHL Complete)。我们还检索了11个护理人员特定网站、3个会议链接和2个临床试验注册库。
我们纳入了随机对照试验(RCT)(包括整群RCT)和半随机对照试验。我们排除了交叉试验,因为从一种干预措施过渡到另一种干预措施存在较高的延续效应风险。
两位作者根据综述的纳入标准独立筛选文献引用、提取数据,并使用Cochrane“偏倚风险”工具评估纳入的研究。综述预先设定的主要结局(生活质量和负担)和次要结局(技能获得、心理健康、知识、健康状况和幸福感、家庭功能、满意度和经济结局)(如报告所述)在干预结束时以及干预后的短期(≤3个月)、中期(>3至≤6个月)和长期时间点(>6至12个月)进行评估。在可能的情况下,进行荟萃分析,否则以叙述方式报告结果。
我们纳入了21项随机研究,涉及1690名护理人员;19项研究比较了电话支持干预和常规护理,其中18项研究为分析提供了数据。两项研究比较了电话支持和非电话专业支持干预。各项研究中护理人员的年龄范围为19岁至87岁。大多数参与者为女性(>70.53%),两项试验仅纳入了女性。大多数护理人员是家庭成员,接受过高中以上教育或具有同等教育年限。所有护理人员都来自社区。大多数研究的总体偏倚风险较高。结果表明,在干预结束时,电话支持干预与常规护理在生活质量这一主要结局方面可能几乎没有差异(标准化均数差 -0.02,95%置信区间 -0.24至0.19,4项研究,364名护理人员)(中等确定性证据),或在干预结束时的负担方面(标准化均数差 -0.11,95%置信区间 -0.30至0.07,9项研究,788名护理人员)(低确定性证据)。对于一项以叙述方式报告干预结束时生活质量的研究,结果表明,与常规护理相比,电话支持干预可能会使生活质量略高。另外两项关于护理人员负担的研究以叙述方式报告;一项报告称电话支持干预可能会减轻负担,另一项报告称干预组与常规护理相比没有变化。由于关于这一结局的证据确定性非常低,我们不确定电话支持干预对干预结束时护理人员抑郁的影响(标准化均数差 -0.37,95%置信区间 -0.70至 -0.05,9项研究,792名护理人员)。三项研究以叙述方式报告了抑郁情况。一项报告称干预可能会在干预结束时减轻护理人员的抑郁,但这种效果在短期随访中未持续。另外两项研究报告称,在干预结束时,电话支持与常规护理在抑郁方面可能几乎没有差异。六项研究测量了对干预的满意度,但未报告比较数据。所有六项研究均报告对干预的满意度得分较高。纳入的任何研究均未测量或报告不良事件,包括自杀或自杀意念。我们的分析表明,与常规护理相比,仅通过电话支持干预,在干预结束时护理人员的焦虑可能会略有降低(均数差 -6.0,95%置信区间 -11.68至 -0.32,1项研究,61名护理人员),护理准备情况可能会略有改善(标准化均数差 0.37,95%置信区间 0.09至0.64,2项研究,208名护理人员)。结果表明,在干预结束时,电话支持干预与常规护理在以下所有结局方面可能几乎没有差异:解决问题能力、社交活动、护理人员能力、应对能力、压力、知识、身体健康、自我效能感、家庭功能以及对支持(实际或社交)的满意度。在短期随访时,电话支持干预对生活质量和负担的影响可能很小或没有影响;在中期随访时,对负担和抑郁的影响可能很小或没有影响。在比较电话支持和非电话专业支持干预的研究中,两组在任何报告的结局方面均未发现差异。我们不确定与非电话支持干预相比,电话支持干预对干预结束时护理人员负担和抑郁的影响。没有研究报告生活质量或对干预的满意度,在两项报告此项比较的研究中也未报告或提及不良事件。
尽管我们的综述表明电话支持干预在某些结局方面(如干预结束时的焦虑和护理准备情况)可能存在轻微益处,但对于大多数结局,包括主要结局,与常规护理相比,仅电话干预对护理人员结局的影响可能很小或没有影响。综述结果主要基于总体偏倚风险较高且参与者较少的研究。需要进一步开展样本量更大的高质量试验。