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Circles of Care: Implementation and Evaluation of Support Teams for African Americans With Cancer

机译:护理界:非洲裔美国癌症患者支持团队的实施和评估

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摘要

Background. Community-based peer support may help meet the practical, emotional, and spiritual needs of African Americans with advanced cancer. Support teams are a unique model of peer support for persons facing serious illness, but research is rare. This study sought to (a) implement new volunteer support teams for African Americans with advanced cancer in two distinct regions and (b) evaluate support teams' ability to improve support, awareness of services, and quality of life for these patients. Methods. The study used a pre-post design. Community and academic partners collaborated to implement volunteer support teams and evaluate the intervention using pre-post surveys of volunteers and patients. Patients who declined support teams were also interviewed as a comparison group. Results. Investigators enrolled and trained 130 volunteers who formed 25 support teams in two geographic regions. Volunteers supported 25 African American patients with advanced cancer (72%) or other diseases. After 2 months, patients with support teams reported fewer needs for practical, emotional, and spiritual support on a structured checklist. They more often communicated with someone about their cancer care needs (48% vs. 75%, p = .04), and were more aware of Hospice (4% vs. 25%, p = .04), but quality of life scores were unchanged. Comparison patients who refused a support team had fewer support needs at baseline and follow-up, suggesting that refusals were based on a lack of need. Conclusion. Coordinated volunteer support teams are a promising new model to provide peer support for African Americans facing cancer and other serious illnesses. Further testing in a pragmatic clinical trial is warranted.
机译:背景。基于社区的同伴支持可能有助于满足患有晚期癌症的非洲裔美国人的实际,情感和精神需求。支持团队是面对重病患者的同伴支持的独特模式,但研究很少。这项研究旨在(a)在两个不同的地区建立针对患有晚期癌症的非洲裔美国人的新志愿者支持团队,以及(b)评估支持团队改善这些患者的支持,服务意识和生活质量的能力。方法。该研究采用了事前设计。社区和学术伙伴合作实施了志愿者支持团队,并通过对志愿者和患者的事前调查来评估干预措施。拒绝支持小组的患者也作为比较组接受了采访。结果。研究人员招募和培训了130名志愿者,他们在两个地理区域组成了25个支持小组。志愿者为25名患有晚期癌症(72%)或其他疾病的非裔美国人患者提供了支持。 2个月后,有支持小组的患者在结构化清单上报告对实践,情感和精神支持的需求减少。他们更经常与某人就其癌症护理需求进行沟通(48%比75%,p = .04),并且更了解临终关怀(4%vs. 25%,p = .04),但是生活质量得分没有变化。拒绝支持团队的比较患者在基线和随访中的支持需求较少,这表明拒绝是基于缺乏需求。结论。协调的志愿者支持团队是一种很有前途的新模式,可以为面临癌症和其他严重疾病的非洲裔美国人提供同伴支持。有必要在实际的临床试验中进行进一步的测试。

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