“I Feel Like I Work Full-Time for Parkinson’s”: A Longitudinal Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis of the Experiences of Parkinson’s Informal Caregivers during COVID-19 in England
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Design
2.2. Sampling and Participants
2.3. Data Collection
2.4. Data Analysis
2.5. Ethics
3. Results
3.1. Theme 1: Lockdown-Induced Revolution and Evolution of Relationship Dynamic with Partner
And I think it was the responsibility that I had [caring for her husband during lockdown] that really frightened me because I thought it’s up to me now to keep [name] well and exercise so I became his speech therapist, his physio, his OT, his pharmacist, everything.(Gemma (All names have been changed to preserve anonymity), T1)
We just, we carried on, we do, you know, our meals, we have… I tend to get them organised, yeah, I mean, I do think that I’m more of a carer now than I ever was, but it’s not to say he couldn’t do it.(Alice, T1)
I feel like I work full-time for Parkinson’s, and so I don’t have time, very little time for myself, other than when [name’s] gone to bed, and so I probably stay up later than I should, reading or knitting or something.(Gemma, T2)
And it [lockdown] has speeded along [Partner]’s deterioration because he doesn’t have to make an effort to go out any more, he doesn’t have to speak with people. So now he would prefer not to bother.(Janine, T2)
I’m watching him slip away through my fingers, really, and trying to advise him, trying to motivate him.(Janine, T2)
Yeah, in some ways, it’s almost like being a parent [caring for husband], and that’s what is really difficult, because obviously, you know, we started out as an equal partnership, and now it’s, like, it’s a bit like being on a seesaw really, you know, I’m either at the bottom or the top. And we can never be balanced, because I’m making the decisions and saying, “Well, we can do this, we can’t do that”. Yeah, it is difficult.(Rachel, T2)
I think we’d just got into a routine. I think we’d just got into a routine of being just us, and just walking, and having our dinner, and just doing things, just the two of us. And I think we just got into a routine of doing that. I think there wasn’t any pressure on us to be here or be there.(Patrick, T1)
We still tend to do most things together, you know, for instance, we’re planning to go up to X in the [Location], one of our favourite places, and do, this weekend, something like a 15-mile walk.(Paul, T2)
So, I don’t really want to feel like I have… I want him to be independent and, yeah, but the other day, he did actually freeze, and I thought, “Oh I’d better help him with his coat. I’ll have to help him”. So yeah. I still don’t want to, I don’t see myself as that, but it didn’t feel nice. And I was… I suppose I did turn into that carer the other day and it felt horrible.(Rachel, T2)
3.2. Theme 2: Fighting to Be Seen, Heard, and Understood in Healthcare Encounters
Yeah, well, as a carer you’re invisible a lot of the time. [we had contact from the surgery] to say we could book his flu [jab]. So, I phoned them and I booked it and I said I will have to bring [name] and I’m his wife, I’m his full-time carer, but I haven’t had a letter yet which, we’re the same age, I haven’t had a letter yet and they said “we can’t book yours until you get your letter”. And it just makes you feel… sometimes it’s such an effort. I feel as though you have to pick your fights, but I do feel very strongly about that because if I get the flu, we won’t manage.(Gemma, T1)
That was the frustrating part of COVID. I mean, not being able to talk about [Partner’s] condition in a, you know, in a room with another healthcare professional who knows him, you know, or actually can see those subtle changes, you know… I would say since he’s been going back to the hospital, you know, they’ve changed his medication and they’ve increased his medication, and he needed it, you know. And as far as I’m concerned, you know, that was frustrating.(Patrick, T1)
I do get very frustrated and I am very irritable sometimes, but when we have so many, you know, seeing lots of different professionals at different times, and I feel…and they will always start off and want to talk to [name], but it’s so exhausting for him that we have an agreement, and I’ll say to [name], “Would you like me to explain how you’ve been, [name], is that okay?” and then I just bring him in all the time, rather than me just talking over [name]. But it’s his…well, it’s our life.(Gemma, T2)
I think they [consultants] could have done a little bit more for him. They just take it, because he seems to be a strong person, that he doesn’t need it as much, and I’m sorry, they don’t know him, you know, they’ve not looked at the situation properly and taken into account what he was going through with me.(Catherine, T2)
I did, actually, realise that I need to talk it [anxiety of husband not receiving suitable Parkinson’s support] through with someone and I’ve done that. I requested some counselling and had to have it privately because I needed to offload.(Janine, T2)
3.3. Theme 3: Making Sense of, and Adapting to, Risk in a Time of COVID-19
I mean, it’s, like, sometimes my partner will say to me, “Shall we just go out and do such and such,” just for a run in the car and what have you, and sometimes I don’t want to do it, I don’t want to go out of the house. And it’s not because of going near anybody. I don’t really know sometimes why. I suppose I feel secure in the house, I feel comfortable and safe in the house.(Sandra, T1)
So, I think after that [lockdown] mind, it’s been a bit of shoulder shrugging, like, “Well, so what? We’re going out now”. And like I don’t wear a mask anymore.(Sandra, T2)
I’ve had quite a few family members and friends that sort of, you know, have had it, and they’re very good because they will sort of let me know, even our next-door neighbour, she and her little boy had it and she texted me and said, “Just keep away from us because we’ve got COVID and we don’t want to give it to you,” you know. So, I’ve had some good friends that have been protective as well, if they’ve had a cold or whatever, they’ve sort of, you know, said, “Look, I’m not going to come,” or, you know, they’ll phone, that kind of thing.(Catherine, T2)
Well, one of my postgraduates is epidemiology so I was able to take a reasonable… the actual risk of contracting COVID-19 first time round was actually, was quite infinitely small if you just changed your lifestyle slightly.(Paul, T2)
We’re on a coach for this tour, so there’s going to be hours and hours on a coach and I don’t think I could cope with wearing a mask all that time. I think I’ll start to feel claustrophobic. They’re not insisting that you do but then I think should we maybe do it just for that protection, you know, so you’re always that little bit nervous about things, you know.(Rachel, T2)
3.4. Theme 4: Managing Isolation and Need for Support during and after Lockdown
Oh well, we haven’t got that [Parkinson’s nurse access] now [during lockdown] and I know you can ring them, you can call them, but it is… yeah, it was just like a little bit of the jigsaw was missing, and you didn’t quite have everything that you needed.(Sandra, T1)
We were reassured because she was having regular conversations with the Parkinson’s nurse who is first class and my wife, we’ve got other friends have got, you know, who’ve gone through Parkinson’s are friends of ours.(Paul, T1)
I think as long as you’ve got the contact with your Parkinson’s nurses and doctors, you know, and they have been very good, they’re on call any time, you know.(Rachel, T1)
I know and people tell me that and say “oh, you know, could you go to bed early or could you get some exercise?” and I say, “well, I’d love to go to bed early but I’ve got to make sure [name]’s in bed first because I can’t leave [name] to switch lights off and make sure the doors are locked or that there’s nothing left on.” And then doing exercise I can’t leave [name] on his own in the house unless I know that he’s completely safe, you know, if he’s asleep. So, if he goes to bed, I’ll whizz out for a quick walk.(Gemma, T1)
Yeah, that’s [meeting neighbours to talk during lockdown] changed now, because you know in the lockdown, people…we meet [different group] on Thursdays, because that’s when the physio is, and while our partners are leaping around, about half a dozen of us sit around chatting about how Parkinson’s is affecting us.(Paul, T2)
I do have a few friends whose other halves have got Parkinson’s, and so we support each other and we have a moan together, or we text each other, and that’s…that’s really helpful because you know that that other person is going through the same or similar, and so it’s not a case of just moaning, it’s just someone understanding what you’re saying.(Gemma, T2)
We say we [participant and husband] could paper the spare room with the cancellation letters for outpatient appointments because they make them then they cancel them.(Alice, T2)
And he’d [husband] sent this information to the consultant’s secretary for her to give it to him for him to look at, and that’s one of the things that he was supposed to be ringing us back on, and of course, he’d also asked a few questions about the new medication they wanted him to go on, and it had just gone on for so long, and I think, you know, that [difficulty contacting the consultant] had a bad effect really in that respect.(Catherine, T1)
Okay, I suppose the balance of life with no social life and no recreation, we’re one to one in isolation, and his [husband] mood has slipped quite a lot. So, I don’t feel sometimes that he’s there anymore.(Janine, T2)
4. Discussion
4.1. Summary of Main Findings
4.2. Theoretical and Clinical Implications
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Pseudonym (Gender) | Age | Current (C)/ Former (F) Employment | Partner Age | Years since Partner’s Diagnosis | Length of Relationship (Years) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Paul (M) | 75 | Senior manager (F) | 75 | 6 | 56 |
Gemma (F) | 65 | NHS worker (F) | 64 | 12 | --- |
Janine (F) | 79 | Healthcare worker (F) | 82 | 15 | 50 |
Alice (F) | 73 | Personal assistant (F) | 79 | 7 | 34 |
Sandra (F) | 53 | Civil servant (C) | 56 | 9 | 32 |
Rachel (F) | 64 | Accountant (F) | 71 | 11 | 48 |
Patrick (M) | 57 | Healthcare worker (C) | 59 | 6 | --- |
Jordon (M) | 73 | Senior practitioner (F) | 74 | 20 | 57 |
Catherine (F) | 57 | Teacher (F) | 67 | 9 | 21 |
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Garner, I.W.; Murray, C.D.; Eccles, F.J.R.; Zarotti, N.; Simpson, J. “I Feel Like I Work Full-Time for Parkinson’s”: A Longitudinal Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis of the Experiences of Parkinson’s Informal Caregivers during COVID-19 in England. NeuroSci 2023, 4, 105-117. https://doi.org/10.3390/neurosci4020011
Garner IW, Murray CD, Eccles FJR, Zarotti N, Simpson J. “I Feel Like I Work Full-Time for Parkinson’s”: A Longitudinal Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis of the Experiences of Parkinson’s Informal Caregivers during COVID-19 in England. NeuroSci. 2023; 4(2):105-117. https://doi.org/10.3390/neurosci4020011
Chicago/Turabian StyleGarner, Ian W., Craig D. Murray, Fiona J. R. Eccles, Nicolò Zarotti, and Jane Simpson. 2023. "“I Feel Like I Work Full-Time for Parkinson’s”: A Longitudinal Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis of the Experiences of Parkinson’s Informal Caregivers during COVID-19 in England" NeuroSci 4, no. 2: 105-117. https://doi.org/10.3390/neurosci4020011
APA StyleGarner, I. W., Murray, C. D., Eccles, F. J. R., Zarotti, N., & Simpson, J. (2023). “I Feel Like I Work Full-Time for Parkinson’s”: A Longitudinal Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis of the Experiences of Parkinson’s Informal Caregivers during COVID-19 in England. NeuroSci, 4(2), 105-117. https://doi.org/10.3390/neurosci4020011