Cancer Communication and Family Caregiver Quality of Life

Family caregivers have enormous communication responsibilities tied to caregiving, such as sharing the patient’s medical history with providers, relaying diagnosis and prognosis to other family members, and making decisions about care with the patient. While caregiver stress and burden has been wide...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Elaine Wittenberg, Tami Borneman, Marianna Koczywas, Catherine Del Ferraro, Betty Ferrell
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2017-03-01
Series:Behavioral Sciences
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2076-328X/7/1/12
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spelling doaj-9af32fa1d2e3479a99e3cc4c7c36c9d72020-11-24T21:07:10ZengMDPI AGBehavioral Sciences2076-328X2017-03-01711210.3390/bs7010012bs7010012Cancer Communication and Family Caregiver Quality of LifeElaine Wittenberg0Tami Borneman1Marianna Koczywas2Catherine Del Ferraro3Betty Ferrell4City of Hope Comprehensive Cancer Center, 1500 E. Duarte Road, Duarte, CA 91010, USACity of Hope Comprehensive Cancer Center, 1500 E. Duarte Road, Duarte, CA 91010, USACity of Hope Comprehensive Cancer Center, 1500 E. Duarte Road, Duarte, CA 91010, USACity of Hope Comprehensive Cancer Center, 1500 E. Duarte Road, Duarte, CA 91010, USACity of Hope Comprehensive Cancer Center, 1500 E. Duarte Road, Duarte, CA 91010, USAFamily caregivers have enormous communication responsibilities tied to caregiving, such as sharing the patient’s medical history with providers, relaying diagnosis and prognosis to other family members, and making decisions about care with the patient. While caregiver stress and burden has been widely documented in the caregiving literature, little is known about how communication burden, real or perceived communication challenges, impacts caregiver quality of life. In family caregiving, the City of Hope (COH) Quality of Life model proposes that the caregiving experience is reciprocal to the patient experience, impacting physical, social, psychological, and spiritual quality of life. We used data from a pilot study testing a communication coaching call intervention with family caregivers of lung cancer patients to analyze caregiver reported communication burden and quality of life. We found variances in each quality of life domain, suggesting that caregiver interventions should range from self-care skill building for physical care to psycho-educational interventions that support caregiver coping and communication skill building. These findings demonstrate the importance of caregiver assessment and attention to communication burden in quality cancer care.http://www.mdpi.com/2076-328X/7/1/12cancercommunicationoncologyfamily caregivingcaregiverquality of life
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Elaine Wittenberg
Tami Borneman
Marianna Koczywas
Catherine Del Ferraro
Betty Ferrell
spellingShingle Elaine Wittenberg
Tami Borneman
Marianna Koczywas
Catherine Del Ferraro
Betty Ferrell
Cancer Communication and Family Caregiver Quality of Life
Behavioral Sciences
cancer
communication
oncology
family caregiving
caregiver
quality of life
author_facet Elaine Wittenberg
Tami Borneman
Marianna Koczywas
Catherine Del Ferraro
Betty Ferrell
author_sort Elaine Wittenberg
title Cancer Communication and Family Caregiver Quality of Life
title_short Cancer Communication and Family Caregiver Quality of Life
title_full Cancer Communication and Family Caregiver Quality of Life
title_fullStr Cancer Communication and Family Caregiver Quality of Life
title_full_unstemmed Cancer Communication and Family Caregiver Quality of Life
title_sort cancer communication and family caregiver quality of life
publisher MDPI AG
series Behavioral Sciences
issn 2076-328X
publishDate 2017-03-01
description Family caregivers have enormous communication responsibilities tied to caregiving, such as sharing the patient’s medical history with providers, relaying diagnosis and prognosis to other family members, and making decisions about care with the patient. While caregiver stress and burden has been widely documented in the caregiving literature, little is known about how communication burden, real or perceived communication challenges, impacts caregiver quality of life. In family caregiving, the City of Hope (COH) Quality of Life model proposes that the caregiving experience is reciprocal to the patient experience, impacting physical, social, psychological, and spiritual quality of life. We used data from a pilot study testing a communication coaching call intervention with family caregivers of lung cancer patients to analyze caregiver reported communication burden and quality of life. We found variances in each quality of life domain, suggesting that caregiver interventions should range from self-care skill building for physical care to psycho-educational interventions that support caregiver coping and communication skill building. These findings demonstrate the importance of caregiver assessment and attention to communication burden in quality cancer care.
topic cancer
communication
oncology
family caregiving
caregiver
quality of life
url http://www.mdpi.com/2076-328X/7/1/12
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AT mariannakoczywas cancercommunicationandfamilycaregiverqualityoflife
AT catherinedelferraro cancercommunicationandfamilycaregiverqualityoflife
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