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Relationships between supportive care needs and perceived burden in breast cancer survivor–caregiver dyads
Author(s) -
Kemp Emma,
Prior Kirsty,
Beatty Lisa,
Lambert Sylvie D.,
Brown Chris,
Koczwara Bogda
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
european journal of cancer care
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.849
H-Index - 67
eISSN - 1365-2354
pISSN - 0961-5423
DOI - 10.1111/ecc.12875
Subject(s) - caregiver burden , medicine , anxiety , social support , caregiver stress , clinical psychology , breast cancer , family caregivers , multilevel model , depression (economics) , gerontology , psychiatry , cancer , dementia , psychology , disease , psychotherapist , pathology , machine learning , computer science , economics , macroeconomics
While burden in cancer caregivers is high and associated with poor outcomes, little is known about significance of specific supportive care needs’ domains in determining survivors’ or caregivers’ perceived caregiver burden. This cross‐sectional study explored which domains of survivor‐ and caregiver‐reported supportive care needs were most associated with survivor‐ and caregiver‐reported caregiver burden, in breast cancer survivor–caregiver dyads. Cancer survivors ( N  = 55) and their caregivers ( N  = 44) completed measures of supportive care needs, anxiety, depression, functional well‐being and perceived caregiver burden. Correlation and linear regression analyses were used to determine relative significance of survivor and caregiver supportive care needs in accounting for variance in survivor and caregiver perceptions of burden. Higher survivor‐perceived caregiver burden and higher caregiver‐perceived difficulty of caregiving were associated with higher levels of survivor and caregiver supportive care needs. Survivors’ psychological needs uniquely contributed to survivors’ self‐perceived burden, and survivors’ sexual needs and caregivers’ work and social needs uniquely contributed to caregivers’ perceived difficulty of caregiving. Caregiver's perceived time spent caregiving was associated with access to services needs but not other needs. Survivor and caregiver supportive care needs and burden appear interdependent. Longitudinal research with larger samples is warranted to examine these relationships.

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