Abstract

BackgroundFamily caregivers are key actors in the ageing society. They are mediators between practitioners and patients and usually provide also essential daily services for the elders. However, till now, few services have been deployed to help caregivers in their care tasks as in improving their mental health which can experience sever burden due to caregiving duties. The purpose of the study is to implement a community-based participatory research project to co-design an innovative organizational model of social services for family caregivers of elderly health consumers living in remote rural areas in Italy.MethodsThis is a community-based participatory research project in the remote area of Vallecamonica involving four main phases. These included a quantitative analysis of caregiver needs, a scoping review on existing services for caregivers, co-design workshops with local stakeholders and caregivers to create a novel service the piloting and a first implementation of the service and the assessment of project transferability to other contexts.ResultsAs the hours dedicated to elder care increases, both objective and developmental caregiver’s burden significantly increases. Conversely, higher levels of engagement were associated with lower physical and emotional burden, and caregiver engagement was positively correlated with their perceived self-efficacy in managing disruptive patient behaviours. Based on these preliminary results, four co-design workshops with caregivers were conducted and led to the definition of the SOS caregivers service, built on four pillars structured upon the previous need analysis: a citizens’ management board, training courses, peer-to-peer meetings, and project and service information. We found that co-design is an effective means of creating new services for family caregivers, whose experiential knowledge proved to be a key resource for the project team in delivering and managing services. Less positively, the transferability analysis indicated that local municipalities remain reluctant to acknowledge caregivers’ pivotal role.ConclusionsA dedicated support service for caregivers can ameliorate caregiving conditions and engagement levels. The service has resulted a successful co-productive initiative for a psycho-social intervention for family caregivers. For the future, we suggest that family caregiver should be considered an active partner in the process of designing novel psycho-social services and not just as recipients to enhance a better aging-in-place process.

Highlights

  • Caregivers are key actors in the ageing society

  • We suggest that family caregiver should be considered an active partner in the process of designing novel psycho-social services and not just as recipients to enhance a better aging-in-place process

  • This paper reports the results of the Place4Cares project [18], a community-based participatory research project to co-designing, piloting and assessing the transferability of an novel organizational model of psycho-social services for family caregivers of elderly health consumers living in the remote rural area of Vallecamonica in Italy

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Summary

Introduction

Caregivers are key actors in the ageing society. They are mediators between practitioners and patients and usually provide essential daily services for the elders. ‘Ageing-in-place’—that is, elderly people continuing to live at home for as long as possible—is recognized as a key strategy to improve the quality of life of elderly health consumers and to ensure the sustainability of social and welfare systems In this scenario, family caregivers play a pivotal role in the daily care of elders, both by assisting with their care and by coordinating interventions and activities with all actors involved in enhancing elders’ health. Family caregivers play a pivotal role in the daily care of elders, both by assisting with their care and by coordinating interventions and activities with all actors involved in enhancing elders’ health This requires caregivers to dedicate lot of time to care tasks, which can impact negatively on their own quality of life. Engaging family caregivers in the care network is potentially a critical asset in implementing ‘ageing-in-place’, especially in remote and rural areas where family caregivers can, if effectively engaged, bridge the gaps caused by the fragmentation of social and welfare systems [5, 6]

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