학술논문

Caring for Partners of a Dismal Dance: Listening for Spiritual Suffering in Family Caregivers of Patients with Huntington's Chorea (FR265).
Document Type
Article
Source
Journal of Pain & Symptom Management. May2022, Vol. 63 Issue 5, p824-825. 2p.
Subject
*HUNTINGTON disease
*CAREGIVERS
*PATIENTS' families
*HOSPICE nurses
*PATIENT-family relations
*BURDEN of care
*NEUROLOGISTS
*COMPLICATED grief
Language
ISSN
0885-3924
Abstract
Outcomes 1. Diagram the clash of movement, emotional, behavioral, and cognitive regression in Huntington's disease (HD); explain how this devastating disease affects families and caregivers 2. Identify and interpret significant themes of HD caregiver spiritual distress by listening to a caregiver's story; define and clarify challenges and opportunities in supporting HD families with expert palliative care 3. Discover and normalize suicidality and anger (at loved ones, others, society, and God) in HD; integrate with interdisciplinary neurology-based teams to foster more compassionate engagement and psycho-socio-spiritual support for family caregivers of patients with HD Huntington's disease (HD) is a rare neurodegenerative disorder with unique manifestations where involuntary choreiform movement, emotional, behavioral, and cognitive afflictions collide. There are no treatments for this dismal dance. HD imposes big strains on families and caregivers with its variable age of onset, prolonged course, and autosomal dominant hereditary transmission. Half of children of patients with HD—who may care for their regressing parent—will manifest the disease's pathology later in their own lives. Strong emotions and intense spiritual distress haunt caregivers as they try to "dance" with their loved ones who are slowly degenerating before their eyes. Our group recently reviewed the literature on the spiritual suffering, grief and loss, and coping mechanisms that caregivers of patients with HD experience; no articles were published in palliative care journals. Education on HD is uncommon. HD neurologists apply primary palliative care principles to patients with HD who avail themselves of their care networks, and yet HD presents unique hospice/palliative care opportunities that need identification and further definition. This interactive session will illustrate HD caregiver spiritual suffering via three case narratives, highlighted with video clips folded into a MSW's story: her and her daughter's saga with their husband/father, her father-in-law's case, and the account of an HD patient's mother who cared for her adult son until his acute quadriplegia from a fall. Participants will use their narrative medicine skills by listening to, absorbing, interpreting, and acting on her story. Interactive dialogue sessions will help presenters and participants alike identify and clarify challenges and opportunities to integrating expert hospice/palliative support of HD family caregivers. A palliative care physician with a Master of Divinity will discuss supporting patients and caregivers experiencing significant existential and spiritual distress who may be suicidal or angry at God. Participants can thus enrich and synthesize their emotional and spiritual support skills for caregivers of patients with devastating neurodegenerative diseases. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]