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Individualised Informal Caregiver Training for Palliative Care at Home

Not Applicable
Terminated
Conditions
Palliative Care
Interventions
Behavioral: Caregiver training
Registration Number
NCT02591693
Lead Sponsor
University of Oxford
Brief Summary

The purpose of this study is to determine whether a training intervention to improve caregiver confidence for family caregivers of patients with palliative care needs at home, is acceptable to patients and their caregivers.

Detailed Description

Many patients with terminal illnesses rely on friends and family for much of their practical day to day care. These friends and family members often lack the skills and confidence to carry out these tasks and studies have shown that many would want more support. Studies have also shown that many patients feel they are a burden.

This study involves carers receiving training to learn the skills they need to care for their loved one. Adult patients with terminal illnesses, currently receiving care from a specified hospice in the South East of England, who have a friend or family member caring for them at home are eligible to be referred for this study.

The training of the carer will be carried out over three sessions by an Occupational Therapist in the patient's own home.The training will focus on goals that the patient and carer have chosen together.

The carer will be asked to complete before and after questionnaires and some will be asked to take part in interviews to see how they felt about the study.

The potential benefits of this study are to increase carer confidence in caring for their loved one.

The overall aim of this study is to test out the research method to see if patients and carers find this training and the outcome measures acceptable. If they do then the investigators plan to learn from this study to design a larger randomised control trial which would be the best way of knowing for sure whether and in what ways this training is helpful.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
TERMINATED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
14
Inclusion Criteria
  • Patient currently at home, reliant on family/friends (lay carers) some or all of the time to help with practical or personal care.
  • The carer is aged 18 years or over.
  • The carer and the patient have the capacity to consent to being involved in the study.
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Exclusion Criteria
  • There is a current plan in place for all care to be provided by paid carers full time.
  • The patient currently receiving more than one contact with Hospice Specialist Occupational Therapy or is likely to develop needs requiring more than one contact Hospice Occupational Therapy over the four week study intervention period.
  • Patients and carers who are not able to speak or understand adequate English for consent to be obtained, to be able to undertake carer training and to complete the study outcome measures.
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Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Caregiver TrainingCaregiver trainingThree home visits by a specialist occupational therapist, each lasting 1-2 hours. Assessment and training to confidently achieve up to three goals relating to practical activities of daily living identified by patient and caregiver. On-going usual care from multi-professional team at hospice.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Recruitment, retention, attrition, missing data rates6 weeks post recruitment

To evaluate feasibility of study

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Preparedness for caregiving scaleBaseline and 4-6 weeks

Validated for carers of patients with dementia but is used in palliative care settings. Eight items evaluate carer preparedness to care across multiple domains of caregiving. Items rated on a 5 point scale. Low scores indicate less preparedness.

Caregiver Burden Scale at End of LifeBaseline and 4-6 weeks

Validated for use in carers looking after patients with chronic illness. 14 items measured on a 5 point scale evaluate perceived difficulty in completing tasks. High scores indicate greater burden.

Carer Confidence ScaleBaseline and 4-6 weeks

Non validated. Developed by research team as no existing tools measure carer confidence in palliative care settings. A single question asks carers to rate their confidence to care on a 5 point scale. Higher scores indicate greater confidence.

Modified Caregiver Strain IndexBaseline and 4-6 weeks

13 item tool developed for carers looking after older adults living in community based settings. Items measure strain related to care provision in financial, physical, psychological, social or personal domains scored on a three point scale. High scores indicate higher levels of strain.

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Sir Michael Sobell House Hospice

🇬🇧

Oxford, Oxfordshire, United Kingdom

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