iSupport for Young Carers: An Adaptation of an e-Health Intervention for Young Dementia Carers
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Methodological Approach
2.2. Participants
2.3. Data Collection
2.3.1. Stage 1: Consultation and Feedback–Preliminary Adaptation
- ▪
- The completion of a ‘tailored made’ workbook (only young carer participants) – this included all sections of iSupport, and it was created following the template of the WHO adaptation guideline documents [36]. Young carers completed the workbook in their own time as an when convenient. The workbook allowed participants to, for each section, select whether they would ‘Take this section out’, ‘Keep it in as it is’ or ‘Keep it but making changes to the language, content, or illustrations’. Free text space was also provided for participants to write down ideas on how they would improve that section. Participants could choose whether they completed the workbook on the computer (Word document) or using a printed hardcopy.
- ▪
- Online face to face feedback sessions with PMA. These meetings with young carers and professionals were audio and video recorded with the consent of participants and handled in accordance with the UK Data Protection Act [40]. Young carers followed the sections of the workbook and discussed their annotations with PMA. Meetings with professionals were not structured and focussed on particular sections of iSupport identified by them as more in need of adaptation.
- ▪
- Annotations on the iSupport pdf handbook (young carer and professionals). Participants were told that these annotations could be regarding all aspects to iSupport including content, structure, design, or language (the iSupport handbook is free to download at https://www.who.int/publications/i/item/9789241515863 (accessed on 21 December 2022))
2.3.2. Stage 2: Refinement and Final Adaptation
2.4. Data Charting and Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Participants
3.2. Stage 1 and Stage 2 Findings
3.2.1. Adaptation
Dimension 1: Structure and Design
Dimension 2: Context
Dimension 3: Content
Dimension 4: Language
4. Discussion
4.1. Future Research
4.2. Limitations
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Inclusion criteria | Young carers
| Professionals
|
Exclusion criteria |
|
|
Age | Gender | Family Member with Dementia | Brief Family Context (at the Time of Study) | |
---|---|---|---|---|
P1 | 12 | Female | Father | P1 and P2 are siblings. They help care for their dad who was diagnosed with early onset dementia when they were very young. They have received limited support in their role as YC (e.g., peer support online groups). |
P2 | 13 | Female | Father | |
P3 | 16 | Female | Grandma | P3 and P4 are siblings. They support their parents in caring for their grandma who lives with them and is in the last stages of dementia. The family have support from a dementia charity and paid carers. P3 and P4 have attended online YC support groups. |
P4 | 12 | Female | Grandma | |
P5 | 13 | Female | Father | P5 helps her mum care for her dad who was diagnosed with early onset dementia when she was 3 yrs. old. She has an older sibling that has recently moved away to go to university. The family have support from a dementia charity and paid carers. |
P6 | 14 | Male | Grandad | P6 and her older brother help their mum care for their grandad who lives with them and is in the last stages of vascular dementia. The family have support from paid carers who visit four times a day. P6 has not received any support as a YC. |
Dimension | Feedback (Identified Issue) | Adaptation |
---|---|---|
STRUCTURE & DESIGN | Information presented in long paragraphs. |
|
Difficult to distinguish between sections |
| |
Difficult to identify important information within a section |
| |
Difficult to follow the information included in Module 3 (Lesson 2) which describes several relaxation exercises |
| |
CONTEXT | The way that the role of young carers is presented needs to be ‘normalised’ |
|
Young carers need to be ‘protected’ from heavy caring loads and inappropriate caring responsibilities and this needs to be reflected in the text |
| |
A context of support: the programmed needs to present all possible and expected sources of support (across all modules) |
| |
CONTENT (Illustrations) | Patronizing (e.g., balloon images) |
|
Meaning hard to understand |
| |
Threatening (e.g., warning symbol in ‘Tip’ and ‘Remember’ text boxes) |
| |
Cover image not appropriate for young people |
| |
CONTENT (Narratives) | Characters in case scenarios primarily older adults, often spouses | Case scenarios across five modules edited and new ones created:
|
Case scenarios describing activities or situations unlikely (or inappropriate) for a young person | ||
No mention of schools and the role they might play |
| |
Lack of information regarding transition to care home (and the impact it might have on young carers) |
| |
LANGUAGE | Too technical (complex) | Example: ‘Transmitters’ replaced by ‘chemicals’; ‘Visual hallucinations’ explained as ‘seeing things that are not there’; ‘Delusions/Unreal thoughts’ replaced by ‘strong belief not shared by others (unreal beliefs)’; ‘Distressing self-protected behaviours’ replaced by ‘difficult behaviours’ |
Too formal or threatening | Example: ‘Brain tumour’ deleted; ‘How to plan pleasant activities’ replaced by ‘Making time for yourself’; ‘Unmet needs’ replaced by ‘things you or the person living with dementia needs but you are struggling to achieve’; ‘Promote good sleep’ replaced by ‘help the person with dementia sleep better’; ‘Changes in judgement’ replaced by ‘saying the wrong thing at the wrong time’ | |
Old fashioned | Example:‘Making a phone call’ replaced by ‘on your phone (mobile)’ | |
Use of language that can sound ‘judgemental’ in the multiple-choice case scenario exercises |
| |
Use of language that implies that everybody’s experience of living with dementia and their symptoms are the same | Example: ‘People with dementia experience…’ replaced by ‘Sometimes people with dementia may experience…’ ‘Remember’ text box added: ‘Just because a person has one or two of the symptoms listed in Activity 1 doesn’t mean they have dementia’ (Module 1) | |
In Module 3 (Lesson 3) there is only reference to pleasant activities |
| |
Language that sounds ‘too much like school’ |
|
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Share and Cite
Masterson-Algar, P.; Egan, K.; Flynn, G.; Hughes, G.; Spector, A.; Stott, J.; Windle, G. iSupport for Young Carers: An Adaptation of an e-Health Intervention for Young Dementia Carers. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2023, 20, 127. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20010127
Masterson-Algar P, Egan K, Flynn G, Hughes G, Spector A, Stott J, Windle G. iSupport for Young Carers: An Adaptation of an e-Health Intervention for Young Dementia Carers. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2023; 20(1):127. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20010127
Chicago/Turabian StyleMasterson-Algar, Patricia, Kieren Egan, Greg Flynn, Gwenllian Hughes, Aimee Spector, Joshua Stott, and Gill Windle. 2023. "iSupport for Young Carers: An Adaptation of an e-Health Intervention for Young Dementia Carers" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 20, no. 1: 127. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20010127
APA StyleMasterson-Algar, P., Egan, K., Flynn, G., Hughes, G., Spector, A., Stott, J., & Windle, G. (2023). iSupport for Young Carers: An Adaptation of an e-Health Intervention for Young Dementia Carers. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 20(1), 127. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20010127