Family caregivers of Black cancer survivors face major knowledge, navigational, and financial challenges, emphasizing the need for targeted training and support to reduce caregiving burden.
Family caregivers of Black cancer survivors face significant educational, navigational, and financial burdens, highlighting the need for targeted support programs and caregiving training.
Tasa de eventos absoluta: 0% vs 0%
Abstract Background: Cancer survivorship requires significant contributions from family caregivers at home. This role can be burdensome because family members play a vital role in the physical, functional, and emotional well-being of patients diagnosed with cancer. Although optimum care throughout the care continuum requires significant caregiver support at home, family caregivers' contribution to survivorship care is usually neglected. We provide the preliminary outcomes of caregivers' challenges and experiences in providing care and survivorship support to Black cancer survivors. We also identified ways to provide support for family caregivers. Methods: This qualitative study obtained information from 8 caregivers who care for Black cancer survivors who have completed treatment in the United States. The study used a phenomenological design to obtain data from participants. In-depth interviews focused on participants' lived experiences caring for Black patients with cancer. The study captured caregivers' personal stories of how they dealt with diagnosis, feelings, emotions, reactions, understanding of the disease, prognosis, and treatment options and decision process, as well as survivorship of their care recipients. All interviews were video recorded and transcribed verbatim. The transcript of each participant's interview was reviewed, analyzed, and coded, with emerging themes interpreted. Results: The major cahllenges identified were (1) lack of knowledge of cancer, the disease and treatment course before the diagnoses; (2) home care burden, which include the challenges of combining care for a sick person at home with caring for other members of the family and taking care of domestic chores; (3) patient care navigation, including identifying healthcare professional for specialist care, adequate health insurances, scheduling doctors' appointment, transportation, insurance and treatment paperwork; (4) financial challenges, especially keeping up with job, family income reduction, increase out of pocket spendings, as well as expensive drugs and treatment co-pays. Most of the caregivers agreed that they neglected their personal health while caring for their care recipient. All caregivers wished they received more information and training on how to care for a patient with cancer. Possible solutions identified were care packets providing information on cancer and how to provide care at home, patient care navigation to social determinants of health and financial support programs, counselling for mental health and emotional support, peer support groups for caregivers, health checks, and a contact to call for support. Conclusion: Caring for cancer patients at home is very challenging; having a care packet and caregiving training is important to support survivorship and reduce the caregiving burden experienced by family caregivers. Citation Format: Opeyemi Oreoluwa Bolajoko, Jada Melton, Mary Ellen Young, Folakemi T. Odedina. Perspectives on cancer survivorship: Voices of family caregivers abstract. In: Proceedings of the American Association for Cancer Research Annual Meeting 2026; Part 1 (Regular Abstracts); 2026 Apr 17-22; San Diego, CA. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2026;86(7 Suppl):Abstract nr 1248.
Bolajoko et al. (Fri,) reported a other. Family caregivers of Black cancer survivors face major knowledge, navigational, and financial challenges, emphasizing the need for targeted training and support to reduce caregiving burden.