平特五不中

iRespite Services iR茅pit: Developing an app to optimize respite care coordination for palliative care families

Imagine that you are an only child whose mother lives alone several hours away. She is receiving palliative care services for her terminal cancer diagnosis, and she鈥檚 determined to die at home. You long to be with her during this time. Since you鈥檙e permitted to work remotely, you move in with her. However, you never knew how exhausting 24/7 care is when caring for a dying loved one.

You didn鈥檛 realize how much work hygiene care takes, for someone who can barely move. You didn鈥檛 realize that you鈥檒l become snippy with each other, at the end of long days when you鈥檙e both tired, sad, and in pain. You didn鈥檛 realize that your mother would experience respiratory distress, and you wouldn鈥檛 know what to do - yet. You鈥檙e learning, but there is no one else learning with you, and you know you can鈥檛 keep your promise for your mother to die at home much longer without help.

One night, after the millionth scare of the week where you wonder, 鈥淚s this it?鈥 You break down crying. You need a break. You need help, right now. But who can you call? Who can you and your mother trust to provide this intensive, last-minute care?

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Respite care services are critical for supporting death at home. These services offer short breaks for family caregivers and care recipients while another person provides caregiving services. Yet, the current landscape of respite care services in Qu茅bec is fragmented across the public and private sectors. Services are frequently difficult to access and schedule. Often, the hours are inflexible, and the services are typically staffed by homecare providers with limited specialized expertise. As a result, caregivers and care recipients may be reluctant to use these services, so they often go unused.

Other industries, such as transportation and food delivery, are developing smartphone applications (鈥渁pps鈥) to make services more flexible. However, few apps have been developed to coordinate nurse-provided respite care services, and none of these appear to have been designed with families with cancer.

iRespite Services iR茅pit seeks to help the thousands of families who experience similar situations to the one described above. The team will collaboratively design an app for coordinating flexible and trusted in-home respite care services, provided by nurses to families coping with palliative-stage cancer in Qu茅bec. Over the next year, the team will conduct repeated online design sessions with: oncology-, palliative-, and home-care nurses; family caregivers of adults living with palliative-stage cancer; adults living with palliative-stage cancer; and other key stakeholders. These design sessions will help offer solutions for improving the coordination of respite care services in Qu茅bec, as the app is iteratively developed.

A transdisciplinary approach is needed when designing solutions for complex health systems challenges. The iRespite research program is being led by Principal Investigator Argerie Tsimicalis, PhD RN, and doctoral candidate , RN. Additional team specialists include: nursing telehealth expert and PhD co-supervisor Antonia Arnaert, PhD RN; cancer mHealth expert and Opal platform co-developer John Kildea, PhD; Canada Research Chair in Inclusive Social Computing computer scientist Karyn Moffatt, PhD; Jewish General Hospital nursing and palliative care clinician scientist Bessy Bitzas, RN PhD; and the Palliative Home-Care Society of Greater Montreal nurse manager , BScN RN.

Five research trainees have joined the team, as well, including: Gabrielle Lalonde-LeBlond, Joche Londo帽o Velez, Justine Tremblay, Tracy Nghiem, RN, MSc(A), NP Student, and Ariana Pagnotta, RN, BScN. Trainees are synthesizing varying sources of knowledge to inform the app. These projects include an environmental scan of available respite care services in Qu茅bec, and an in depth-search of the Apple and Android app stores for existing respite care apps.

The current focus of the iRespite team is on palliative oncology care in Qu茅bec, as cancer is the most common cause of death in Canada, and Qu茅bec experiences some of the highest mortality rates in the country. However, in the future, these results may be translated and adapted to other Canadian contexts and populations, supporting care and end-of-life at home, where most Canadians wish to be.

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iRespite is always seeking collaborations and feedback. If you are a student, nurse, family caregiver, adult living with cancer, or anyone else interested in discussing our research and sharing ideas, please reach out!

Aimee Castro: Twitter: @AimeeRCastro,
Email: aimee.castro2 [at] mail.mcgill.ca

Argerie Tsimicalis: Twitter: @ArgerieT,
Email: argerie.tsimicalis [at] mcgill.ca

Acknowledgements

This research is funded by the Rossy Cancer Network (RCN). The RCN is a partnership of the 平特五不中 Faculty of Medicine, St. Mary鈥檚 Hospital Center, the Jewish General Hospital and the 平特五不中 Health Centre. The RCN is dedicated to providing world-class patient care, research and teaching. Its mission is to improve quality, effectiveness and efficiency across the continuum of cancer care. See mcgill.ca/rcr-rcn for more details.

Aimee Castro is the recipient of a 2020 studentship funded by the Canadian Center for Applied Research in Cancer Control (ARCC), which is funded by the Canadian Cancer Society (Grant #2015- 703549). Dr. Tsimicalis is a Junior 1 Research Scholar funded by the Fonds de recherche du Qu茅bec (FRQS).

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