Fisher Carla L, Wright Kevin B, Hampton Chelsea N, Vasquez Taylor S, Kastrinos Amanda, Applebaum Allison J, Sae-Hau Maria, Weiss Elisa S, Lincoln Greg, Bylund Carma L
College of Journalism and Communications, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL, USA.
Cancer Control and Population Sciences Program (CCPS), University of Florida Health Cancer Center, Gainesville, FL, USA.
Transl Behav Med. 2021 May 25;11(5):1187-1197. doi: 10.1093/tbm/ibab021.
The COVID-19 pandemic likely exacerbated caregiving challenges for caregivers of parents diagnosed with a blood cancer. Providing care during a public health crisis presents a complex web of uncertainties regarding cancer care, personal health, and COVID-19 risk. Identifying caregivers' uncertainty experiences during the COVID-19 pandemic can be a first step in learning where to direct resources or alter policies to ensure that they can not only perform their caregiver role but also cope in health-promoting ways. Using uncertainty management theory, this study explored how the pandemic has impacted adult child caregivers' experiences caring for a parent diagnosed with a blood cancer, as well as their experiences of uncertainty and uncertainty management. As part of a larger study on blood cancer caregivers' needs, a survey was administered from March 30 to June 1, 2020, to recruit caregivers through the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society. A qualitative and quantitative content analysis was conducted on open-ended responses from 84 caregivers. Caregivers described changes illustrating the complexity of providing care during a pandemic: (a) increased fears and uncertainty-related distress, b) reduced in-person care opportunities, (c) increased isolation, and (d) enhanced family communication. Caregivers with parents diagnosed with acute blood cancers used significantly more uncertainty management strategies and had more sources of uncertainty than caregivers with parents living with chronic blood cancer types. Findings highlight the need for supportive services to help caregivers manage uncertainty and improve their capacity to provide care in an unpredictable global health crisis. Such support may reduce poor psychosocial outcomes.
新冠疫情可能加剧了照顾被诊断患有血癌的父母的照料者所面临的挑战。在公共卫生危机期间提供照料,在癌症护理、个人健康和新冠风险方面呈现出一个充满不确定性的复杂网络。识别新冠疫情期间照料者的不确定性经历,可能是了解将资源导向何处或改变政策的第一步,以确保他们不仅能够履行照料者的角色,还能以促进健康的方式应对。本研究运用不确定性管理理论,探讨了疫情如何影响成年子女照料者照顾被诊断患有血癌的父母的经历,以及他们的不确定性经历和不确定性管理。作为一项关于血癌照料者需求的更大规模研究的一部分,2020年3月30日至6月1日进行了一项调查,通过白血病和淋巴瘤协会招募照料者。对84名照料者的开放式回答进行了定性和定量内容分析。照料者描述了一些变化,这些变化说明了在疫情期间提供照料的复杂性:(a)恐惧和与不确定性相关的痛苦增加,(b)面对面护理机会减少,(c)隔离增加,以及(d)家庭沟通增强。父母被诊断患有急性血癌的照料者比父母患有慢性血癌类型的照料者使用了显著更多的不确定性管理策略,且不确定性来源更多。研究结果凸显了需要支持性服务来帮助照料者管理不确定性,并提高他们在不可预测的全球健康危机中提供照料的能力。这种支持可能会减少不良的心理社会后果。