Abstract

PurposeTo explore how a sample of people with uncontrolled seizures describe their experiences of receiving informal supportive care. MethodsUsing constructivist grounded theory, in-person, semi-structured interviews were conducted in 35 adults with drug-resistant epilepsy. These 20 (57%) women and 15 (43%) men were aged 18–68 years (mean= 35.6 years), with a range of verbal comprehension scores. The majority, 28 (80%) lived in nuclear family settings. ResultsUnpredictable seizures disrupted personal autonomy and generated unique challenges for everyday life. While supportive care was deemed necessary to survival, subjective reflections around the implications of care-receiving and caregiving, were ultimately experienced as mutually burdensome. Four dynamic and interactive dimensions revealed a mirrored, interactive perspective of what it meant to be a care-recipient: assuming responsibility; protecting and supervising; acknowledging reliance and setting boundaries. Care-recipience was not one-sided, but included actively hiding personal struggles as a way to shield the caregiver from the emotional and physical demands of caregiving. Relationship dynamics between caregivers and care-recipients played a major role in treatment decision-making. A clinically useful Theory of Reciprocal Burden resulted from our study. ConclusionsThis study adds an explanatory dimension to the concept of illness burden from the perspective of care-recipients. Relationship dynamics play a key role in patient-centered epilepsy care, with clinical implications for guiding supportive caregiving, fostering independence and promoting self-management strategies.

Highlights

  • Drug-resistant epilepsy (DRE) is serious disorder characterized by unpredictable and intrusive seizures

  • Epilepsy is as much a focus of the lives of caregivers, as it is for those diagnosed with the condition [2,3,4]

  • Caregiving is frequently subtle and varied, both with respect to how carers identify with the role and the tasks they undertake

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Summary

Introduction

Drug-resistant epilepsy (DRE) is serious disorder characterized by unpredictable and intrusive seizures. Poor memory and cognitive deficits, family caregivers have to be relied upon for disease management and emotional support [1]. Caregiving is frequently subtle and varied, both with respect to how carers identify with the role and the tasks they undertake. Cultural sensitivity plays a role in how the responsibilities of caregiving are shouldered [7]. Labeling these informal caregivers is not simple, and encompasses various terms such as primary support persons [3], carers [6], caregivers [8,9], or family caregivers [10]

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