Do You Feel Safe at Home? A Qualitative Study among Home-Dwelling Older Adults with Advanced Incurable Cancer
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. The Meaning of a Home to Older Adults
1.2. The Home and Older Adults with Cancer
2. Methodology
2.1. Recruitment Strategy and Sample
2.2. Interviews
2.3. Analysis
2.4. Ethics
3. Results
3.1. Good Home-Safety Management
3.2. Valuable Characteristics of the Homes—Predictability and House Quality
3.3. Caregiver Availability and Close Relationship
3.4. Activities, Memories, and Independent Life in the Home
3.5. Uncertain Home-Safety Management
3.6. Independent but Unprotected
3.7. Feeling Insecure about Living Alone
3.8. Home-Safety Management Collapse
3.9. Spending Parts of the Day Alone in the Home
3.10. High Symptom Burden
3.11. Unable to Move Around
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Gender, Age, Living Arrangements | Disease/Function/ Health Issues | Assistance | Help from Partner/Family |
---|---|---|---|
A. Male, 74 years old, lives with wife. | Lung cancer with metastasis to colon. Leakage from colon following surgery. Breathing problems and poor mobility due to hip problems. Was able to go out to his own car until a few months ago. Can barely walk up and down stairs. Previous heart attack and thrombosis. Uses several medicines. | Private home services. | Son helps with shopping. |
B. Male, 78 years old, lives alone. | Prostate cancer with metastasis to bones. Chemotherapy, no curative intention. Out-patient treatment. Very weak during weekly chemotherapy. Severe pain and uses morphine-based pain relief plasters. Weak and tired, sleeps poorly, and anxiety issues. Confusion, but he attributes this to sleep medication. COPD. Has venous access port (VAP), and urinary catheter. | Receives treatment from various hospitals: national cancer hospital, central hospital, and local hospital. Some private home health services. | Some help from neighbours. |
C. Male, 82 years old, lives with wife. | Bone marrow cancer, back fracture, operated to stabilise joints. In a lot of pain, reduced vision, and swollen legs. Chemotherapy and morphine-based plasters. Eating problems. Needs help to get out of bed and help to move around. | Home care nurse assists with medication administration. | Wife helps moving around indoors. |
D. Female, 60 years old, lives with husband. | Breast cancer with pelvic and head metastasis. Somewhat disoriented due to the metastasis to the head. Coordination problems. Weight loss during treatment. Previous hip fracture still bothering her. Unable to go out on her own. | Home care nurse. Days in a palliative unit. Followed up by primary physician. | Husband helps with all practical tasks at home. He also helps his wife moving indoors and outdoors. |
E. Female, 71 years old, lives with partner. | Oesophageal and tracheal cancer, heavy breathing, heart problems, diabetes, and several wounds. Enteral nutrition only. Difficulties walking stairs. Unable to go out on her own. Difficulties sleeping, prescribed sleeping pills. | Help from home care nurse several times a week. Follow-up by primary physician. | Husband deals with enteral nutrition and administration of medication. |
F. Female, 68 years old, lives with her husband. | Breast cancer and colorectal cancer with colostomy. Special diet, significant weight loss. Tired and weak, becomes dizzy, and balance issues. Difficulties sleeping. Still receiving chemotherapy as tablets. Changes bandages every day. Can go out on her own. | Colostomy nurse weekly. | Husband helps with all practical tasks at home. |
G. Male, 80 years old, lives alone, son has apartment in same house. | Cancer of the bladder, urostomy, diabetes, and all toes on one leg amputated. Has received radiation treatment. In a lot of pain. Physical therapy. Goes out on his own. | Home care nurse daily. Needs help with caring for fistula, administration of medication, and showering. | |
H. Male, 86 years, lives alone old, partner stops by occasionally. | Prostate cancer, in wheel-chair. Has stair lift and many aids installed in home. Impaired mobility, but the kitchen is well modified and he has a telephone on a table right next to where the wheelchair is placed. | Home care nurse daily. Needs help with showering and shopping | No help from family, but partner stops by occasionally. Considered moving. |
Home-Safety Management | ||
---|---|---|
Good Home-Safety Management | Uncertain Home-Safety Management | Home-Safety Management Collapse |
Valuable characteristics of the homes—predictability and house quality Caregiver availability and close relationship Activities, memories, and independent life in the home | Independent but unprotected Feeling insecure about living at home | Spending part of the days alone in the home High symptom burden Unable to move around |
Phase 1 | Phase 2 | Phase 3 | Phase 4 | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Home dimension | Dimensions of the participant’s life situation | The disease’s role in the meaning of the home | Characteristics of home-safety management | |
Participant: A C E | Possibilities for going outdoors on the terrace and the balcony. spaciousness, takes pride in the home. Lives with partner. | The disease affects daily life to a great extent. Partner’s contribution is extensive. The partner’s contribution is both explicit and implicit. Emphasises meaningful and valued qualities of the home. | Enjoys the home. The disease underscores the meaning of the home. At the same time, the home places the disease in the background. | Good home-safety management. Home-safety management partly coped with by the participant or taken over by caregivers or relatives. |
Participant: B | Activities, memories, interior, takes pride in the home. Lives alone. | The disease affects daily life to a great extent. Makes great personal efforts to remain in the home. Emphasises own efforts in forming the home. | Enjoys the home. The disease underscores the meaning of the home. At the same time, the home places the disease in the background. | Good home-safety management. Independent safety management. |
Participant: F H | Takes pride in the home, garden, terrace, emotional attachment to the home, wants independence. One lives alone, one with a partner. | The disease necessitates extra efforts to remain in the home, but everyday life is, in the main, the same as before. Emphasises meaningful and valuable qualities of the home and own efforts in forming the home. | Enjoys the home. Considers moving but is uncertain. The disease creates uncertainty regarding the home in the future. | Uncertain home-safety management. |
Participant: D G | Emphasises no aspect of the home. Lives with partner/family. | The disease affects daily life to a great extent. The participant is passive and immobile, cannot go out without help, difficulties moving around, has periodically not received needed help. | Does not wish to be alone in the home. Expresses no enjoyment of the home. The disease makes the participants unable to enjoy the home. | Home-safety management collapse. |
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Grov, E.K.; Ytrehus, S. Do You Feel Safe at Home? A Qualitative Study among Home-Dwelling Older Adults with Advanced Incurable Cancer. Healthcare 2022, 10, 2384. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare10122384
Grov EK, Ytrehus S. Do You Feel Safe at Home? A Qualitative Study among Home-Dwelling Older Adults with Advanced Incurable Cancer. Healthcare. 2022; 10(12):2384. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare10122384
Chicago/Turabian StyleGrov, Ellen Karine, and Siri Ytrehus. 2022. "Do You Feel Safe at Home? A Qualitative Study among Home-Dwelling Older Adults with Advanced Incurable Cancer" Healthcare 10, no. 12: 2384. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare10122384
APA StyleGrov, E. K., & Ytrehus, S. (2022). Do You Feel Safe at Home? A Qualitative Study among Home-Dwelling Older Adults with Advanced Incurable Cancer. Healthcare, 10(12), 2384. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare10122384