Home > Research > Publications & Outputs > Respite in palliative care :a review and discus...
View graph of relations

Respite in palliative care :a review and discussion of the literature.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Published

Standard

Respite in palliative care :a review and discussion of the literature. / Ingleton, Christine; Payne, Sheila; Nolan, M. et al.
In: Palliative Medicine, Vol. 17, No. 7, 10.2003, p. 567-575.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Ingleton, C, Payne, S, Nolan, M & Carey, I 2003, 'Respite in palliative care :a review and discussion of the literature.', Palliative Medicine, vol. 17, no. 7, pp. 567-575. https://doi.org/10.1191/0269216303pm803ra

APA

Ingleton, C., Payne, S., Nolan, M., & Carey, I. (2003). Respite in palliative care :a review and discussion of the literature. Palliative Medicine, 17(7), 567-575. https://doi.org/10.1191/0269216303pm803ra

Vancouver

Ingleton C, Payne S, Nolan M, Carey I. Respite in palliative care :a review and discussion of the literature. Palliative Medicine. 2003 Oct;17(7):567-575. doi: 10.1191/0269216303pm803ra

Author

Ingleton, Christine ; Payne, Sheila ; Nolan, M. et al. / Respite in palliative care :a review and discussion of the literature. In: Palliative Medicine. 2003 ; Vol. 17, No. 7. pp. 567-575.

Bibtex

@article{1646a9be7b3a4eac98f422e8ca13b3e5,
title = "Respite in palliative care :a review and discussion of the literature.",
abstract = "Family caregivers, who are patientsflrelatives and friends (hereafter called carers), play a significant and arguably most important role in enabling patients to make choices about their place of care during advanced disease and in the terminal phase. Relatively little attention has been directed towards identifying the needs of carers who find themselves in this position and what interventions (if any) might best support them in continuing to provide care to the patient during the illness and dying trajectory. What evidence there is suggests that while some aspects of caring are looked on positively, carers also experience challenges in maintaining their physical and psychological health and their social and financial wellbeing. One common recommendation is that respite facilities be provided. The purpose of this paper is to consider the definitions and assumptions that underpin the term {\textquoteright}respitefland its impact on the physical, psychological and social outcomes of carers in palliative care contexts. We conducted a review of the literature, which involved searching five electronic databases: Web of Science, Medline, CINHAHL, Cochrane Database System Review and Social Sciences Citation Index. The search identified 260 papers, of which 28 related directly to adult respite care in specialist palliative care. These papers were largely concerned with descriptive accounts of respite programmes, guidance on referral criteria to respite services or were evaluating the effects of respite on the patient rather than the impact on the carer. We did not identify any empirical studies assessing the effects of respite provided by specialist palliative care services on carer outcomes. There is insufficient evidence to draw conclusions about the efficacy of offering respite care to support carers of patients with advanced disease. We, therefore, draw on the wider literature on carers of adults with chronic disease to consider the impact of respite services and offer suggestions for further research.",
keywords = "carers • care trajectory • interventions • respite care • specialist palliative care",
author = "Christine Ingleton and Sheila Payne and M. Nolan and I. Carey",
year = "2003",
month = oct,
doi = "10.1191/0269216303pm803ra",
language = "English",
volume = "17",
pages = "567--575",
journal = "Palliative Medicine",
issn = "1477-030X",
publisher = "SAGE Publications Ltd",
number = "7",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Respite in palliative care :a review and discussion of the literature.

AU - Ingleton, Christine

AU - Payne, Sheila

AU - Nolan, M.

AU - Carey, I.

PY - 2003/10

Y1 - 2003/10

N2 - Family caregivers, who are patientsflrelatives and friends (hereafter called carers), play a significant and arguably most important role in enabling patients to make choices about their place of care during advanced disease and in the terminal phase. Relatively little attention has been directed towards identifying the needs of carers who find themselves in this position and what interventions (if any) might best support them in continuing to provide care to the patient during the illness and dying trajectory. What evidence there is suggests that while some aspects of caring are looked on positively, carers also experience challenges in maintaining their physical and psychological health and their social and financial wellbeing. One common recommendation is that respite facilities be provided. The purpose of this paper is to consider the definitions and assumptions that underpin the term ’respitefland its impact on the physical, psychological and social outcomes of carers in palliative care contexts. We conducted a review of the literature, which involved searching five electronic databases: Web of Science, Medline, CINHAHL, Cochrane Database System Review and Social Sciences Citation Index. The search identified 260 papers, of which 28 related directly to adult respite care in specialist palliative care. These papers were largely concerned with descriptive accounts of respite programmes, guidance on referral criteria to respite services or were evaluating the effects of respite on the patient rather than the impact on the carer. We did not identify any empirical studies assessing the effects of respite provided by specialist palliative care services on carer outcomes. There is insufficient evidence to draw conclusions about the efficacy of offering respite care to support carers of patients with advanced disease. We, therefore, draw on the wider literature on carers of adults with chronic disease to consider the impact of respite services and offer suggestions for further research.

AB - Family caregivers, who are patientsflrelatives and friends (hereafter called carers), play a significant and arguably most important role in enabling patients to make choices about their place of care during advanced disease and in the terminal phase. Relatively little attention has been directed towards identifying the needs of carers who find themselves in this position and what interventions (if any) might best support them in continuing to provide care to the patient during the illness and dying trajectory. What evidence there is suggests that while some aspects of caring are looked on positively, carers also experience challenges in maintaining their physical and psychological health and their social and financial wellbeing. One common recommendation is that respite facilities be provided. The purpose of this paper is to consider the definitions and assumptions that underpin the term ’respitefland its impact on the physical, psychological and social outcomes of carers in palliative care contexts. We conducted a review of the literature, which involved searching five electronic databases: Web of Science, Medline, CINHAHL, Cochrane Database System Review and Social Sciences Citation Index. The search identified 260 papers, of which 28 related directly to adult respite care in specialist palliative care. These papers were largely concerned with descriptive accounts of respite programmes, guidance on referral criteria to respite services or were evaluating the effects of respite on the patient rather than the impact on the carer. We did not identify any empirical studies assessing the effects of respite provided by specialist palliative care services on carer outcomes. There is insufficient evidence to draw conclusions about the efficacy of offering respite care to support carers of patients with advanced disease. We, therefore, draw on the wider literature on carers of adults with chronic disease to consider the impact of respite services and offer suggestions for further research.

KW - carers • care trajectory • interventions • respite care • specialist palliative care

U2 - 10.1191/0269216303pm803ra

DO - 10.1191/0269216303pm803ra

M3 - Journal article

VL - 17

SP - 567

EP - 575

JO - Palliative Medicine

JF - Palliative Medicine

SN - 1477-030X

IS - 7

ER -