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Abstract / Description of output
BACKGROUND: General practices in the United Kingdom are encouraged to have a protocol for the identification of carers and a mechanism for social care referral. However, a minority of carers are identified and those caring for someone with a terminal illness often cope until the situation becomes overwhelming. Earlier identification could enable more timely support. The aim of this project was to model and pilot a systematic approach to identify, assess and support carers of people with supportive and palliative care needs in primary care.
METHOD: The intervention was modelled on the Medical Research Council complex intervention framework with a preliminary theoretical phase, which has been reported elsewhere. In this study, which lasted 12 months, four general practices were recruited. Each practice identified a 'carer liaison' person to take the lead in identifying carers, followed by assessment and support using a toolkit modelled from the earlier phase. Qualitative evaluation interviews were conducted with carers who had received the intervention and the carer liaisons and general practitioners in the pilot practices. A stakeholder event was held to disseminate and deliberate the findings.
RESULTS: The practices' populations ranged from 5840 to 10832 patients and across the four practices, 83 carers were identified. Thirty six carers were identified from practice registers (disease - 16; palliative care - 9; carer - 11; advanced care plan - 12), whilst 28 were identified opportunistically by practice staff at appointments or at home. Seven carers self-identified. Overall, 81 carers received the carer pack and 25 returned the Carer Support Needs Assessment Tool (CSNAT) form. Eleven carers received a follow up call from the practice to discuss support and 12 were also referred/signposted for support. Qualitative interviews suggest carers valued connection with their practices but the paperwork in the toolkit was onerous.
CONCLUSION: This approach to identifying and supporting carers was acceptable, but success was dependent on engagement within the whole practice. Carers did not tend to self-identify, nor ask for help. Practices need to proactively identify carers using existing opportunities, resources and computer systems, and also adopt a public health approach to raise carer awareness and perceived support within their communities.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 18 |
Journal | BMC Family Practice |
Volume | 17 |
Issue number | 1 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 11 Feb 2016 |
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Dive into the research topics of 'Piloting a new approach in primary care to identify, assess and support carers of people with terminal illnesses: a feasibility study'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.Projects
- 1 Finished
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A feasibility study of early identification, assessment and support for informal carers in primary care
Finucane, A., Murray, S., Kendall, M., Harrison, N., Greenacre, J. & Jarvis, A.
1/11/12 → 31/10/14
Project: Research