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Home Health Care Management & Practice
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Family Caregiver Provided Massage for Rural-Dwelling Chronically Ill Persons

Diane Kempson, MSW, PhD

University of Wyoming-Laramie, dkempson{at}uwyo.edu

Virginia Conley, PhD, FNP

University of Wyoming-Laramie

Family caregivers attending to chronically ill family members within the community are vulnerable to psychological and medical health issues. Rural caregivers may be at increased risk because of fewer resources. This pilot study explored whether rural caregivers would learn and provide gentle massage to their chronically ill loved ones, would find study participation burdensome, and would realize benefits from providing the massage. Positive results in each of the three areas suggest that providing caregivers with instruction on gentle massage techniques for their chronically ill loved ones may support and enhance rural caregivers' perceptions of self-efficacy and self-agency and thus possibly decrease caregiver vulnerability. The findings of this study are important in light of increasing numbers of chronically ill persons who rely predominantly on home care by family members within the community.

Key Words: massage • caregivers • rural • self-efficacy • self-agency • chronically ill • community care

This version was published on February 1, 2009

Home Health Care Management & Practice, Vol. 21, No. 2, 117-123 (2009)
DOI: 10.1177/1084822308325782


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