Effects of the Values and Options in Cancer Care Communication Intervention on Personal Caregiver Experiences of Cancer Care and Bereavement Outcomes

Care teams are increasingly expected to attend to the needs of patient's personal caregivers (e.g., family members). Improving communication among oncologists, patients with advanced cancer, and their personal caregivers might enhance caregivers' experiences of end-of-life (EoL) cancer car...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of palliative medicine 2019-11, Vol.22 (11), p.1394-1400
Hauptverfasser: Duberstein, Paul R, Maciejewski, Paul K, Epstein, Ronald M, Fenton, Joshua J, Chapman, Benjamin, Norton, Sally A, Hoerger, Michael, Wittink, Marsha N, Tancredi, Daniel J, Xing, Guibo, Mohile, Supriya, Kravitz, Richard L, Prigerson, Holly G
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container_end_page 1400
container_issue 11
container_start_page 1394
container_title Journal of palliative medicine
container_volume 22
creator Duberstein, Paul R
Maciejewski, Paul K
Epstein, Ronald M
Fenton, Joshua J
Chapman, Benjamin
Norton, Sally A
Hoerger, Michael
Wittink, Marsha N
Tancredi, Daniel J
Xing, Guibo
Mohile, Supriya
Kravitz, Richard L
Prigerson, Holly G
description Care teams are increasingly expected to attend to the needs of patient's personal caregivers (e.g., family members). Improving communication among oncologists, patients with advanced cancer, and their personal caregivers might enhance caregivers' experiences of end-of-life (EoL) cancer care and bereavement outcomes. To explore the effects of the Values and Options in Cancer Care intervention on caregivers' experiences of EoL care and bereavement outcomes. We developed a brief behavioral intervention to improve communication among oncologists, patients with advanced cancer, and their personal caregivers. The intervention was designed to help patients/caregivers ask questions, express concerns, and help oncologists respond effectively. We randomly assigned oncologists (and their patients/caregivers) to the intervention or usual care. Medical oncologists in NY and CA; patients/personal caregivers with advanced cancer. Two months after the patient's death, caregivers completed three instruments assessing their experiences of EoL care. Seven months after the patient's death, caregivers completed the Prolonged Grief Disorder-13 (PG-13; primary prespecified outcome), the Purpose-in-Life scale, and scales assessing mental health function, depression, and anxiety. The intervention did not significantly improve caregivers' scores on the PG-13 (  = 0.21), mental health function, depression, or anxiety, but it did improve purpose-in-life scores (  = 0.018). Cohen's (95% confidence interval) for all three experiences of EoL care outcomes were promising, ranging from 0.22 (-0.19 to 0.63) to 0.39 (-0.07 to 0.86) although none was statistically significant. Preliminary findings show promise that scalable interventions in cancer care settings may improve caregiver experiences with cancer care and some bereavement outcomes.
doi_str_mv 10.1089/jpm.2019.0078
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subjects Aged
Bereavement
California
Caregiver Burden - psychology
Communication
Female
Health Care Surveys
Humans
Male
Medical Oncology
Neoplasms
New York
Original
Physician-Patient Relations
Terminal Care
title Effects of the Values and Options in Cancer Care Communication Intervention on Personal Caregiver Experiences of Cancer Care and Bereavement Outcomes
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