Quality of Life in Caregivers of Patients with Brain Tumours: A Systematic Review and Thematic Analysis

Objective. (1) Examine QoL of caregivers of patients with brain tumours compared to population norms and other cancer caregiver groups, (2) appraise the content of quantitative QoL outcome measures utilised, and (3) assess to what extent QoL measures used in research align with caregivers’ prioritie...

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Veröffentlicht in:European journal of cancer care 2023-04, Vol.2023, p.1-12
Hauptverfasser: Tallant, James, Pakzad-Shahabi, Lillie, Lambert, Sylvie D., Williams, Matthew, Wells, Mary
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container_title European journal of cancer care
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creator Tallant, James
Pakzad-Shahabi, Lillie
Lambert, Sylvie D.
Williams, Matthew
Wells, Mary
description Objective. (1) Examine QoL of caregivers of patients with brain tumours compared to population norms and other cancer caregiver groups, (2) appraise the content of quantitative QoL outcome measures utilised, and (3) assess to what extent QoL measures used in research align with caregivers’ priorities. Methods. Systematic literature search of studies including caregivers of brain tumour patients using self-completed assessments of QoL. Extracted data from included studies included quantitative QoL outcome data, QoL outcome measures utilised, and the included QoL domains. The impact of brain tumour patient caregiving was assessed by summarising included data comparing brain tumour caregivers to other cancer caregivers and normative population data. QoL measures utilised by the studies and their domains were extracted, coded, and analysed by themes. The rates of investigation by theme were then compared to existing data on caregiver-own preference in relation to QoL. Results. 49 studies, including 57 outcome measures, incorporating a combined 124 QoL domains. Brain tumour caregivers reported lower QoL outcomes than population norms but similar to other cancer caregiver groups. Thematic analysis of QoL domains generated 7 themes: caregiving burden and adaptation, existential and self, family and social support, finances, information needs, physical symptoms and functioning, and psychological symptoms and wellbeing. The most investigated themes were physical and psychological symptoms, the most important for caregivers themselves were family and social support. Conclusions. Caregiving for brain tumour patients is shown to negatively affect QoL, particularly mental health, burden, and social life. Existing QoL research in caregivers of brain tumour patients predominantly utilises generic QoL measures designed for use in patients and draws a medicalised view of QoL priorities. The few studies using caregiver-specific QoL measures demonstrated closer alignment to caregiver preferences such as family and social support.
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(1) Examine QoL of caregivers of patients with brain tumours compared to population norms and other cancer caregiver groups, (2) appraise the content of quantitative QoL outcome measures utilised, and (3) assess to what extent QoL measures used in research align with caregivers’ priorities. Methods. Systematic literature search of studies including caregivers of brain tumour patients using self-completed assessments of QoL. Extracted data from included studies included quantitative QoL outcome data, QoL outcome measures utilised, and the included QoL domains. The impact of brain tumour patient caregiving was assessed by summarising included data comparing brain tumour caregivers to other cancer caregivers and normative population data. QoL measures utilised by the studies and their domains were extracted, coded, and analysed by themes. The rates of investigation by theme were then compared to existing data on caregiver-own preference in relation to QoL. Results. 49 studies, including 57 outcome measures, incorporating a combined 124 QoL domains. Brain tumour caregivers reported lower QoL outcomes than population norms but similar to other cancer caregiver groups. Thematic analysis of QoL domains generated 7 themes: caregiving burden and adaptation, existential and self, family and social support, finances, information needs, physical symptoms and functioning, and psychological symptoms and wellbeing. The most investigated themes were physical and psychological symptoms, the most important for caregivers themselves were family and social support. Conclusions. Caregiving for brain tumour patients is shown to negatively affect QoL, particularly mental health, burden, and social life. Existing QoL research in caregivers of brain tumour patients predominantly utilises generic QoL measures designed for use in patients and draws a medicalised view of QoL priorities. The few studies using caregiver-specific QoL measures demonstrated closer alignment to caregiver preferences such as family and social support.</description><identifier>ISSN: 1365-2354</identifier><identifier>ISSN: 0961-5423</identifier><identifier>EISSN: 1365-2354</identifier><identifier>DOI: 10.1155/2023/2882837</identifier><language>eng</language><publisher>Oxford: Hindawi</publisher><subject>Analysis ; Anxiety ; Brain ; Brain cancer ; Brain research ; Brain tumors ; Cancer ; Caregivers ; Domains ; Lifestyles ; Mental health ; Metastasis ; Norms ; Oncology, Experimental ; Patients ; Priorities ; Quality of life ; Social interactions ; Social networks ; Systematic review ; Tumors</subject><ispartof>European journal of cancer care, 2023-04, Vol.2023, p.1-12</ispartof><rights>Copyright © 2023 James Tallant et al.</rights><rights>COPYRIGHT 2023 John Wiley &amp; Sons, Inc.</rights><rights>Copyright © 2023 James Tallant et al. 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(1) Examine QoL of caregivers of patients with brain tumours compared to population norms and other cancer caregiver groups, (2) appraise the content of quantitative QoL outcome measures utilised, and (3) assess to what extent QoL measures used in research align with caregivers’ priorities. Methods. Systematic literature search of studies including caregivers of brain tumour patients using self-completed assessments of QoL. Extracted data from included studies included quantitative QoL outcome data, QoL outcome measures utilised, and the included QoL domains. The impact of brain tumour patient caregiving was assessed by summarising included data comparing brain tumour caregivers to other cancer caregivers and normative population data. QoL measures utilised by the studies and their domains were extracted, coded, and analysed by themes. The rates of investigation by theme were then compared to existing data on caregiver-own preference in relation to QoL. 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subjects Analysis
Anxiety
Brain
Brain cancer
Brain research
Brain tumors
Cancer
Caregivers
Domains
Lifestyles
Mental health
Metastasis
Norms
Oncology, Experimental
Patients
Priorities
Quality of life
Social interactions
Social networks
Systematic review
Tumors
title Quality of Life in Caregivers of Patients with Brain Tumours: A Systematic Review and Thematic Analysis
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