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Palliat Support Care · Sep 2010
What makes grief difficult? Perspectives from bereaved family caregivers and healthcare providers of advanced cancer patients.
- Kelli I Stajduhar, Wanda Martin, and Moira Cairns.
- School of Nursing and Centre on Aging, University of Victoria, Victoria, British Columbia, Canada. kis@uvic.ca
- Palliat Support Care. 2010 Sep 1;8(3):277-89.
ObjectiveFamily members who take on the role of caregiving for someone who is dying begin bereavement after being emotionally and physically taxed by the caregiving experience. The course of bereavement is influenced by a number of factors, including health problems, financial concerns, social support, and family relationships. This paper reports on findings from a secondary analysis of qualitative data from a study examining family caregiver coping in end-of-life cancer care, to describe, from the perspectives of bereaved family caregivers, their perspectives on what made their grief difficult.MethodQualitative data from three focus groups with family caregivers (n = 19) and two focus groups with health professionals (n = 14) were subjected to interpretive thematic analysis.ResultsOur finding suggest three broad areas that make family caregivers' grief difficult: (1) dealing with occurrences in everyday life; (2) dealing with challenges specific to the caregiving situation; and (3) dealing with the healthcare system.Significance Of ResultsThe findings provide an important beginning point in understanding the types of issues that seem to make grief difficult for family caregivers of cancer patients at the end of life and can help professional groups to understand what is needed by family caregivers in terms of support and delivery of services.
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