Family Caregivers Clinical Trial
Official title:
Supporting Family Carers to People Living With Symptoms of Dementia at Home up to the End of Life: a Retrospective Qualitative Study Using Principles of Grounded Theory
This is a qualitative study that will seek to gain further understanding of the support needs
of family carers to people living with symptoms of dementia up to the end of life.
Family carers are friends, family members or neighbours who provide informal unpaid care to
someone with symptoms of dementia. The experience of providing this care may result in family
carers developing unmet needs that impact adversely on their total wellbeing. This research
is potentially beneficial because little is known about the specific physical, psychological,
spiritual and social needs family carers to people dying with dementia may develop.
It is a priority of the UK government and the NHS to better support family carers. The
government published guidelines calling on healthcare professionals to assess and address
carer needs, but the evidence base for family carers to people with symptoms of dementia is
limited. Findings from this study could guide healthcare professionals when they conduct
clinical assessments of carer needs.
Each participant to this study will be invited to attend a semi-structured interview at a
venue of their choice where they will talk about their experiences of providing care.
Participants must have provided informal, unpaid care to a friend, neighbour or family member
with symptoms of dementia at home, including within the last twelve months of that person's
life. This is a retrospective study so only former family carers will be eligible to
participate. Participants must also be over the age of eighteen, be able to communicate in
English and have capacity to give informed consent.
This research study is being funded by the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR)
Collaboration for Leadership in Applied Health Research and Care (CLAHRC) as part of their
Research Capacity in Dementia Care Pilot Programme, which is exploring issues relating to
dementia care provision.
This study will seek to explore the experiences of former family carers who supported someone
living with symptoms of dementia at home up to their death.
The principal research objective will be to identify the support needs common to this group
of family carers. The study will explore the main factors that bring about these needs and it
will aim to determine whether a carer's needs change as the health of the person receiving
care deteriorates towards the end of life. The study will also seek to learn more about the
types of assistance family carers receive from health and social care professionals, family
members, friends, neighbours and the voluntary sector.
The principal research objective can be of value because it offers family carers an
opportunity to share their personal stories, insights and experiences. Providing this
information can increase awareness of the carers' role and indicate why a family carer's
total health and wellbeing can decline whilst providing informal support to someone living
with symptoms of dementia, especially as the care recipient nears death.
The findings from this study should enable healthcare professionals to conduct more informed
assessments of carer capacity and wellbeing. The information collected in this study may also
identity interventions that carers felt successfully enhanced their wellbeing and reduced
their needs, particularly at the time when the person they cared for approached the end of
life.
This study will also consider the effectiveness of the Carer Support Needs Assessment Tool
(CSNAT) intervention when used by home-based family carers supporting someone living with
symptoms of dementia.
This assessment tool has been designed to identify the needs of family carers to people with
a life-limiting health condition. The CSNAT helps these carers to prioritise their needs and
seek appropriate solutions. It also enables healthcare professionals to provide more tailored
support.
This is a qualitative study. Approximately thirty participants will be recruited and each be
asked to take part in a semi-structured interview. The researcher will also record
observational data in the form of reflective, contemporary field notes.
People who have provided informal, unpaid care to a friend, neighbour or family member with
symptoms of dementia will be asked to participate. The support they have given may have been
provided on either a permanent or intermittent basis, however all participants must have had
some involvement in the provision of home-based care during the last twelve months of the
care recipient's life. This is a retrospective study. The care recipient must have died not
less than six months and not more than five years before the interview takes place. All
participants must also be over eighteen years of age, be able to communicate in English and
have capacity to provide informed consent.
Participants will be recruited with the assistance of health and social care professionals
including an Admiral Nurse Manager. Healthcare agencies, charities, community organisations
and groups that represent older adults have also been approached. Representatives from these
organisations will be asked to send participant recruitment packs to all former family carers
listed on their caseloads/databases who meet the inclusion criteria.
Details of the study will be uploaded onto forums of dementia, carer and research-related
websites including www.joindementiaresearch.co.uk. The researcher will also request
permission to put up informational posters in local community centres including GP practices.
The posters will include the researcher's contact details so anyone who wishes to receive
more information about the study can do so. The researcher will attend meetings of local
support groups to raise awareness about the study, answer questions and distribute
participant recruitment packs to possible volunteers. In addition, potential participants who
express an interest in the research study via word of mouth will also be sent participant
recruitment packs.
The participant recruitment packs will include an introductory letter and participant
information sheet. Anyone who is interested in participating or who would like to discuss the
study in more detail with the researcher can complete an expression of interest form and
return it in a stamped addressed envelope. The form and envelope will be included in the
participant recruitment packs.
The researcher will telephone those who return a reply form in order to discuss their
voluntary participation in the study, provide them with details of what they will be asked to
do, ensure they meet the inclusion criteria and answer any questions before scheduling an
interview date and location. All interviews will be conducted at least forty-eight hours
following this telephone conversation to give participants opportunity to reflect on their
decision to take part. No further contact will be attempted with those who do not respond
after receiving a participant recruitment pack.
Each participant will be interviewed on one occasion by the researcher in a location of their
choice. They will be informed that the researcher will be happy to interview them in their
own homes if this is convenient. Participants will not be paid, however any reasonable
transport, refreshment or sundry costs will be met by the researcher. Before signing the
consent form, each participant will be informed that they can decline to answer any question
or withdraw from the research study at any time. They will be assured that their healthcare
treatment will not be affected in any way if they do withdraw from the study.
During the interview, participants will be asked to share their experiences of caring for a
person with symptoms of dementia. A broad interview protocol will be used to guide the
semi-structured interview. The interview will focus on topics including the participants'
needs, the factors that generated the needs and also how the needs changed as the person the
participant cared for neared the end of life. Participants will be prompted to reflect on the
support they received from others. There will, however, be some flexibility to the
interview's underlying structure. The interview should feel conversational in tone and
participants will be encouraged to talk openly and raise issues that they consider important
and relevant.
During the interview, participants will also be shown a copy of the Carer Support Needs
Assessment Tool (CSNAT). A large print copy of the tool will be provided for any participant
with poor eyesight. Participants will be asked for their thoughts on the tool and its ease of
use.
The researcher will telephone all participants who gives prior. signed consent in the week
following their interviews to ask them to share any further thoughts on the issues discussed.
It has been found that participants often reflect on their responses to interview questions
after the event and many recall insightful additional information once the interview has
concluded. Capturing this thoughtful, valuable data can add to the quality and depth of the
study. Participants will be informed prior to giving consent that the telephone call will be
recorded and anonymised quotes may be used by the researcher in academic articles or in her
final thesis. Participants will be reminded of this at the start of the telephone call.
Participants will also be reassured that they do not have to take part. The audio-tapes and
any printed material relating to the telephone calls will be stored in a secure, locked
location before being destroyed in line with the University of Manchester Data Protection
Policy. Participants will be asked to propose a convenient date and time for the telephone
contact. The researcher will make the call and incur all financial telecommunication charges
The telephone contact is expected to last around fifteen minutes, but this estimate may vary
depending on how much the participants wish to say.
The interviews and follow-up telephone calls will be audio-taped and transcribed by the
researcher, who will ensure any comments that may reveal the identity of a participant are
obscured. Anonymising the transcripts in this way preserves participant confidentiality. The
researcher will analyse all the data collected during the interviews and telephone calls and
code it line by line, allocating the information provided by the participants to relevant
themes and categories. This process of analysis will be discussed in the research paper. The
researcher will begin to analyse the data soon after conducting the initial interviews.
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