How Community-Based Health and Social Care Professionals Support Unpaid Caregivers: Experiences From One Health Authority in Ontario, Canada

In Ontario, Canada, rising rates of caregiver distress have been the ‘canary in the coal mine’ for a health system out of balance with the needs of an ageing population. Community-based health and social care professionals are well placed to play an important role in the caregiver support process; h...

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Veröffentlicht in:Qualitative health research 2024-08, Vol.34 (10), p.977-988
Hauptverfasser: Webber, Jodi, Finlayson, Marcia, Norman, Kathleen E., Trothen, Tracy J.
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container_title Qualitative health research
container_volume 34
creator Webber, Jodi
Finlayson, Marcia
Norman, Kathleen E.
Trothen, Tracy J.
description In Ontario, Canada, rising rates of caregiver distress have been the ‘canary in the coal mine’ for a health system out of balance with the needs of an ageing population. Community-based health and social care professionals are well placed to play an important role in the caregiver support process; however, a gap has remained in the understanding of if and how caregiver support strategies are operationalized or experienced by community service providers (CSPs). The goal of this study was to describe how CSPs interpreted policy and how those interpretations may enable their work in supporting unpaid caregivers. Using a qualitative constructionist design, we interviewed 24 participants and reviewed 92 publicly available documents. Braun and Clarke’s method of thematic analysis was used for analysis strategy. Four overarching themes were identified: (1) community care as a priority, (2) sidewalk accountability, (3) creative care planning through partnerships, and (4) challenges to care delivery. We found that the importance of caregivers to the health system was reflected in organizational policy and strategy. There is an opportunity to improve health outcome for caregivers and the population alike through strong leadership and a clear shared vision. Our findings also suggested that social capital was a significant factor in enabling providers in their work, leveraging long-standing relationships, and accumulated local knowledge to implement highly creative care plans.
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subjects Accountability
Adult
Aged
Care plans
Caregivers
Caregivers - psychology
Coal
Community
Community health care
Community Health Services - organization & administration
Community service
Constructionism
Female
Health Personnel - psychology
Health services
Humans
Interviews as Topic
Leadership
Local knowledge
Male
Middle Aged
Older people
Ontario
Organizational policy
Partnerships
Psychological distress
Qualitative Research
Social capital
Social services
Social Support
Unpaid
title How Community-Based Health and Social Care Professionals Support Unpaid Caregivers: Experiences From One Health Authority in Ontario, Canada
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