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Journal article

Perceived Benefits and Facilitators and Barriers to Providing Psychosocial Interventions for Informal Caregivers of People with Rare Diseases: A Scoping Review

Abstract

BackgroundLittle is known about the benefits, and barriers and facilitators to providing psychosocial support to caregivers to a loved one with a rare disease.ObjectiveThe aim of our scoping review was to map evidence on (1) perceived benefits and (2) barriers and facilitators of establishing and maintaining services.MethodsThe CINAHL and PubMed databases were searched in December 2018. Qualitative and quantitative studies in any language that described perceived or tested benefits of participating in psychosocial interventions for caregivers, or the barriers and facilitators of providing these interventions, were eligible.ResultsThirty-four studies were included. Interventions were behavioural or psychological, supportive, educational, or multicomponent. All included studies reported on the benefits of participating in psychosocial interventions; 14 (41%) studies also reported on facilitators and 19 (56%) reported on barriers. Benefits that were most commonly found included statistically significant improvements in emotional states (e.g. stress) and caregiver burden and narrative reports of intervention helpfulness. Statistically significant improvements in mental health outcomes (e.g. depression symptoms) were rarely detected. Four themes for facilitators were identified, including intervention characteristics, intervention delivery characteristics, provision of necessary resources, and support provided outside of the intervention. Four barrier themes were also identified: misalignment of intervention to caregiver needs, inability to make time for intervention, practical barriers, emotional barriers.ConclusionsPsychosocial interventions for caregivers to a loved one with a rare disease may be helpful in reducing stress, burden, and feelings of isolation among caregivers. Future research should design interventions for caregivers that take into account facilitators and barriers to establishing and maintaining such interventions.

Authors

Rice DB; Carboni-Jiménez A; Cañedo-Ayala M; Turner KA; Chiovitti M; Levis AW; Thombs BD

Journal

The Patient - Patient-Centered Outcomes Research, Vol. 13, No. 5, pp. 471–519

Publisher

Springer Nature

Publication Date

October 1, 2020

DOI

10.1007/s40271-020-00441-8

ISSN

1178-1653

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