Department of Rural Health, Allied Health and Human Performance, University of South Australia, North Terrace, Adelaide, South Australia, Australia.
Flinders Centre for Innovation in Cancer, College of Medicine and Public Health, Flinders University, Adelaide, South Australia, Australia.
Support Care Cancer. 2022 Jun;30(6):4857-4865. doi: 10.1007/s00520-022-06857-2. Epub 2022 Feb 14.
To explore the experiences of people caring for someone with cancer, while living in rural Australia, and the impact of the cancer-caring role on their well-being.
Eighteen adults in regional or remote ('rural') Australia who cared for a person with cancer took part in semi-structured telephone interviews. Participants were aged 32-77 years and mainly female (66%). Data were analysed using thematic analysis and an essentialist approach.
Eight themes were identified: (1) travel is hard, but supports are available; (2) frustration with systems that do not demonstrate understanding of the rural context; (3) the importance of lay and peer support; (4) the impact of access to trusted, local health care services; (5) the importance of access to rurally relevant information (particularly on relevant services and what to expect); (6) living with uncertainty and balancing loss with hope; (7) reluctance to seek or accept psychological support; and (8) the gendered nature of care.
Rural cancer carers' roles can be made easier by improving health systems and coordination to ease the burden of travel, providing information about available support and what to expect throughout cancer treatment that is relevant to the rural context, and increasing access to quality health, community, and support services, including palliative care, in rural areas. More training on the specific needs of rural patients and their carers is needed for urban health care professionals. Peer support groups may have particular value for cancer carers in rural settings, where there are known to be multiple barriers to accessing professional sources of psychosocial support.
探索在澳大利亚农村照顾癌症患者的人的经历,以及癌症照顾角色对他们福祉的影响。
18 名居住在澳大利亚农村地区(“农村”)的成年人参与了半结构化电话访谈。参与者年龄在 32-77 岁之间,主要为女性(66%)。使用主题分析和本质主义方法对数据进行分析。
确定了八个主题:(1)旅行困难,但有支持;(2)对不了解农村背景的系统感到沮丧;(3)对非专业和同伴支持的重视;(4)获得信任的农村医疗服务的影响;(5)获得与农村相关的信息(特别是有关服务和期望)的重要性;(6)生活在不确定性中,平衡损失与希望;(7)不愿寻求或接受心理支持;(8)护理的性别性质。
通过改善医疗系统和协调以减轻旅行负担,提供有关可用支持以及与农村背景相关的整个癌症治疗期间的预期的信息,增加农村地区获得优质医疗、社区和支持服务(包括姑息治疗)的机会,可以使农村癌症护理者的角色更容易。城市卫生保健专业人员需要更多针对农村患者及其护理者特定需求的培训。对于农村地区的癌症护理者来说,同伴支持小组可能具有特殊价值,因为在这些地区,获得专业心理社会支持存在多种障碍。