• J Palliat Med · Dec 2003

    End-of-life caregiving: what helps family caregivers cope?

    • Ellen M Redinbaugh, Andrew Baum, Sally Tarbell, and Robert Arnold.
    • University of Pittsburgh Cancer Institute, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15232, USA. ellenr@pitt.edu
    • J Palliat Med. 2003 Dec 1;6(6):901-9.

    AbstractPatient care needs and patient quality-of-life (QOL) deficits can be significant stressors for family caregivers. Often, greater caregiving demands and poorer patient QOL are associated with greater caregiver strain. However, caregiver coping behavior can attenuate the effect of caregiving stressors on caregiver strain. This study examined the relationships among caregiving stressors, coping, and caregiver strain in a sample of 31 family caregivers and their terminally ill loved ones enrolled in home hospice programs. Caregiving stressors included patient activity of daily living (ADL) needs and dimensions of patient QOL. Coping was measured with the Family Crisis Personal Evaluation Scale (F-COPES), which has five coping scales: acquiring social support, reframing, seeking spiritual support, passive appraisal, and mobilizing the family to acquire and accept help. Caregiver strain was significantly correlated with patient ADL needs (r = 0.51), patient psychological distress (r = 0.42), and patient existential QOL (r = -0.65). Regression equations indicated that reframing coping lessened caregiver strain. Caregivers who accepted their loved one's illness, redefined illness-related problems in a more manageable way, and felt capable of solving illness-related problems had less caregiver strain than caregivers who used less of a reframing coping style.

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