Myrhøj Cæcilie Borregaard, Nielsen Iben Husted, Visler Camilla Louise, Nørskov Kristina Holmegaard, Piil Karin, Jarden Mary
Department of Hematology, Copenhagen University Hospital, Copenhagen, Denmark.
Department of Hematology, Zealand University Hospital, Roskilde, Denmark.
Support Care Cancer. 2025 Feb 26;33(3):224. doi: 10.1007/s00520-025-09283-2.
Social support interventions, particularly peer support from former family caregivers, offer unique assistance to caregivers of newly diagnosed patients. Since voluntary peer support is driven by personal choice, understanding the motivations for participating and how motivation evolves over time is essential. This study explores the motivations for becoming a peer support provider for family caregivers of patients with hematological malignancies and how motivation changes over time.
This qualitative study encompasses 18 semi-structured interviews with family caregivers providing peer support (N = 11) at two time points: (1) just after certification as peer supporters but prior to starting the peer support program and (2) at the 6-week mark of their 12-week peer support program. Interpretive phenomenological analysis was used to analyze the data.
Motivation for participating in a voluntary peer-to-peer support program as a peer support provider center on four main themes: "Driven by past experiences", "Moral obligation is intrinsic to identity", "Meaningful use of personal experiences", and "Guiding new caregivers". Motivation was influenced during the support program, particularly by the presence or absence of feedback from family caregivers and by participation in network meetings with other peer support providers.
This study emphasizes the importance of networking meetings for family caregiver peer support providers, as they facilitate exchange of knowledge and insights and discussion of challenges and rewards and provide an ongoing support and motivation. It also highlights the untapped potential of volunteering to provide unique social support benefiting both the family caregiver recipient of support and the support provider.
社会支持干预措施,尤其是来自 former family caregivers 的同伴支持,为新诊断患者的照顾者提供了独特的帮助。由于自愿同伴支持是由个人选择驱动的,了解参与的动机以及动机如何随时间演变至关重要。本研究探讨了成为血液系统恶性肿瘤患者家庭照顾者同伴支持提供者的动机,以及动机如何随时间变化。
这项定性研究包括对 18 名家庭照顾者进行半结构化访谈,这些照顾者在两个时间点提供同伴支持(N = 11):(1)刚获得同伴支持者认证但尚未开始同伴支持计划之前;(2)在他们 12 周同伴支持计划的第 6 周。采用解释性现象学分析来分析数据。
作为同伴支持提供者参与自愿同伴支持计划的动机集中在四个主要主题上:“受过去经历驱动”、“道德义务是身份固有的”、“个人经历的有意义利用”和“指导新照顾者”。在支持计划期间,动机受到影响,特别是受到家庭照顾者反馈的有无以及与其他同伴支持提供者参加网络会议的影响。
本研究强调了网络会议对家庭照顾者同伴支持提供者的重要性,因为它们促进了知识和见解的交流以及挑战与回报的讨论,并提供了持续的支持和动力。它还突出了志愿服务未被挖掘的潜力,即提供独特的社会支持,使支持的家庭照顾者接受者和支持提供者都受益。