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A Desire to Be Seen Family Caregivers' Experiences of Their Caring Role in Palliative Home Care

Primary health care is the base of Swedish healthcare, and many terminally ill patients are cared for at home. A dying relative has a profound impact on his/her family members' situation, including negative effects on roles, well-being, and health. The aim of this study was to explore how the informal carers of a dying relative in palliative home care experienced their caring role and support during the patient's final illness and after death. Fourteen family members were selected in 4 primary health care areas in Sweden. Data were collected using open, tape-recorded interviews. A hermeneutic approach was used to analyze the data. The findings revealed that being an informal carer was natural when a relative became seriously ill. More or less voluntarily, the family member took on a caring role of control and responsibility. The informal carers felt left out and had feelings of powerlessness when they did not manage to establish a relationship with the healthcare professionals. For the informal carers to feel seen, it was necessary for them to narrate about their own supporting role.

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Additional Titles
Cancer Nursing

Key Information

Type of Reference
Jour
ISBN/ISSN
0162-220X
Resource Database
Web of science - exported 12/7/2016
Publication Year
2010
Issue Number
1
Volume Number
33
Start Page
28-36