Abstract

There are many challenges in delivering rural health services; this is particularly true for the delivery of palliative care. Previous work has identified consistent themes around end-of-life care, including caregiver burden in providing care, the importance of informal care networks and barriers imposed by geography. Despite these well-known barriers, few studies have explored the experience of palliative care in rural settings. The purpose of the present study was to compare the experiences of rural family caregivers actively providing end-of-life care to the experiences of their urban counterparts. Caregivers' perceived health status, the experience of burden in caregiving, assessment of social supports and the pattern of formal care used by the terminally ill were explored using a consistent and standardized measurement approach. A cross-sectional survey study was conducted with 100 informal caregivers (44 rural, 56 urban) actively providing care to a terminally ill patient recruited from a publicly funded community agency located in northeastern Ontario, Canada. The telephone-based survey included questions assessing: (i) caregiver perceived burden (14-item instrument based on the Caregiver's Burden Scale in End-of-Life Care [CBS-EOLC]); (ii) perceived social support (modified version of the Multidimensional Scale of Perceived Social Support [MSPSS] consisting of 12 items); and (iii) functional status of the care recipient (assessed using the Eastern Collaborative Oncology Group performance scale). Rural and urban caregivers were providing care to recipients with similar functional status; the majority of care recipients were either capable of all self-care or experiencing some limitation in self-care. No group differences were observed for caregiver perceived burden: both rural and urban caregivers reported low levels of burden (CBS-EOLC score of 26.5 [SD=8.1] and 25.0 [SD=9.2], respectively; <em>p</em>=0.41). Urban and rural caregivers also reported similarly high levels of social support (mean MSPSS total score of 4.3 [SD=0.7] and 4.1 [SD=0.8], respectively; <em>p</em>=0.40). Although caregivers across both settings reported using a comparable number of services (rural 4.8 [SD=1.9] vs urban 4.5 [SD=1.8]; <em>p</em>=0.39), the types of services used differed. Rural caregivers reported greater use of family physicians (65.1% vs 40.7%; <em>p</em>=0.02), emergency room visits (31.8% vs 13.0%; <em>p</em>=0.02) and pharmacy services (95.3% vs 70.4%; <em>p</em>=0.002), while urban caregivers reported greater use of caregiver respite services (29.6% vs 11.6%; <em>p</em>=0.03). Through the use of standardized tools, this study explored the experiences of rural informal family caregivers providing palliative care in contrast to the experiences of their urban counterparts. The results of the present study suggest that while there are commonalities to the caregiving experience regardless of setting, key differences also exist. Thus, location is a factor to be considered when implementing palliative care programs and services.

Highlights

  • There are many challenges in delivering rural health services; this is true for the delivery of palliative care

  • Hwang and colleagues suggested that the higher rates of hospitalization observed among patients with cancer in rural areas were likely linked to the difficulties experienced in recruiting and retaining family physicians, who are essential in providing adequate outpatient care for patients with terminal cancer[7]

  • Against this backdrop of issues related to the provision of health care in rural areas, there is growing concern regarding the adequacy of care that is provided, for patients who are terminally ill living with these regions

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Summary

Introduction

There are many challenges in delivering rural health services; this is true for the delivery of palliative care. Hwang and colleagues suggested that the higher rates of hospitalization observed among patients with cancer in rural areas were likely linked to the difficulties experienced in recruiting and retaining family physicians, who are essential in providing adequate outpatient care for patients with terminal cancer[7]. Against this backdrop of issues related to the provision of health care in rural areas, there is growing concern regarding the adequacy of care that is provided, for patients who are terminally ill living with these regions

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