Skip to main content

Research Repository

Advanced Search

Impact of Penny Brohn UK's Living Well Course on informal caregivers of people with cancer

Jolliffe, Rachel C.; Durrant, Jo R.; Seers, Helen E.; Churchward, Sarah F.; Griffiths, Michelle; Naidoo, Marian; Ben-Arye, Eran; Polley, Marie J.; Zollman, Catherine

Authors

Rachel C. Jolliffe

Jo R. Durrant

Helen E. Seers

Sarah F. Churchward

Michelle Griffiths

Marian Naidoo

Eran Ben-Arye

Marie J. Polley

Catherine Zollman



Abstract

Objectives: This study evaluated the change in the concerns, wellbeing, and lifestyle behaviors of informal caregivers of people with cancer attending Penny Brohn UK's Living Well Course (LWC), a self-management education intervention.

Design: A pre–postcourse design collected self-reported quantitative and qualitative data from informal caregivers attending a LWC.

Setting/Location: Penny Brohn UK is a United Kingdom-based charity (not-for-profit) providing specialist integrative, whole person support, free of charge, to people affected by cancer.

Subjects: Informal caregivers taking part in a Penny Brohn UK LWC between June 2014 and May 2016 attending alongside the person with cancer.

Intervention: The LWC is a structured 15 h, multimodal group self-management educational course, designed to help people affected by cancer learn tools and techniques to help build resilience. Trained facilitators deliver LWCs to around 12 people with various types and stages of cancer and their informal caregivers.

Outcome measures: Measure Yourself Concern and Wellbeing (MYCaW) completed precourse and at 6 weeks postcourse; and bespoke 6-week follow-up Patient Reported Experience Measure.

Results: Four hundred eighty informal caregivers attended a LWC June 2014 to May 2016. One hundred eighteen completed a 6-week follow-up MYCaW: MYCaW Concerns 1 and 2 showed statistically significant improvements (p < 0.0001), there was no significant improvement in wellbeing. Informal caregivers' most reported concerns relating to themselves were psychological and emotional issues (59%). The primary concern of the caregiver for the care recipient was related to the physical health of the person with cancer (40%). Eighty-seven percent of responding informal caregivers stated that the LWC enabled health self-management.

Conclusions: The LWC was followed by an improvement in informal caregivers' concerns, and increased self-management of their own health needs. More studies, with larger sample size, are needed to explore if better self-management by informal caregivers may also lead to improvements in patients' health and wellbeing.

Journal Article Type Article
Online Publication Date Sep 24, 2018
Publication Date Sep 24, 2018
Deposit Date Mar 22, 2024
Journal Journal of Alternative and Complementary Medicine
Print ISSN 1075-5535
Electronic ISSN 1557-7708
Publisher Mary Ann Liebert
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 24
Issue 9-10
Pages 974-980
DOI https://doi.org/10.1089/acm.2018.0195
Public URL https://uwe-repository.worktribe.com/output/11837545