Experiences of family members of cancer patients in palliative care: a qualitative systematic review protocol

JBI Evid Synth. 2024 Apr 1;22(4):713-719. doi: 10.11124/JBIES-23-00090.

Abstract

Objective: The objective of this review is to synthesize the experiences of family members of cancer patients in palliative care.

Introduction: Increasingly, palliative care is the approach advocated when a life-threatening illness has been diagnosed. Cancer patients and their families, when receiving early identification, correct assessment, and treatment of pain and other problems through palliative care, report feeling supported in their illness experience. The patients and their families also describe immediate and personalized symptom management, holistic support, decision-making guidance, and preparation for the future, including the dying process and stages of grief. A growing number of studies address palliative care patients and, in particular, the central role of family in this approach. This review will synthesize qualitative research on this subject, providing recommendations to health professionals to help them better understand the experiences and needs of family members of cancer patients receiving palliative care.

Inclusion criteria: The review will consider studies examining experiences of families of cancer patients in palliative care, in all types of settings and contexts. The studies will focus on qualitative data, including, but not limited to, designs such as phenomenology, grounded theory, ethnography, action research, qualitative descriptive, and mixed methods studies.

Methods: The review will follow the JBI methodology for systematic reviews of qualitative evidence. The search strategy will aim to locate both published and unpublished studies, in any language, with no date restrictions. Methodological quality will be evaluated using the standard JBI critical appraisal checklist for qualitative research. The findings will be pooled using the meta-aggregation approach or will be presented in narrative format. The final synthesized findings will be graded according to the ConQual approach.

Review registration: PROSPERO CRD42022333937.

MeSH terms

  • Anthropology, Cultural
  • Family
  • Humans
  • Neoplasms* / therapy
  • Palliative Care* / methods
  • Review Literature as Topic
  • Systematic Reviews as Topic