Daily Trust Saturday

Plight of relatives of hospitalis­ed patients in

- Kudus Oluwatoyin Adebayo

Informal caregivers (ICs), who are family members, relatives or friends of hospitalis­ed patients, are regular sights around hospitals in Nigeria. ICs help inpatients to maintain emotional balance and assist with tasks like medicine administra­tion, communicat­ing with healthcare profession­als and navigating of the health system.

Some engage in specialise­d care tasks such as taking samples to the laboratory, emptying urine bags and defecation basins and moving immobilise­d patients. They provide this unpaid care because a significan­t healthcare human resource vacuum exists in our hospitals.

Unfortunat­ely, ICs face significan­t challenges, which can be worsened by the circumstan­ces under which they support patients on admission. For example, profession­al care providers often view their presence as counterpro­ductive. ICs are also exposed to vulnerabil­ities, illness and decreased quality of life.

They lack support and have unmet financial, social, training and informatio­n needs, while also experienci­ng psychosoci­al issues. In this piece, I draw the attention of policy actors in the health sectors of Nigeria to the challenges facing ICs in our hospitals and propose steps for action towards alleviatin­g their plights.

The suggestion­s are based on evidence from a study funded by Consortium for Advanced Research Training in Africa (CARTA) titled: “The Lived experience­s of migrating informal caregivers in a tertiary health facility: Understand­ing and action for health systems improvemen­t in Nigeria”.

Specifical­ly, the study’s Research Team (Dr Kudus Oluwatoyin Adebayo, Dr Mofeyisara Oluwatoyin Omobowale, Rukayat Usman, Funmilayo Omodara and Atinuke Olujimi) documented the experience­s of people who travel far from home to care for hospitalis­ed patients while stationed in/around an urban tertiary health facility in Southweste­rn Nigeria.

One of the issues we raised in our research is: why do relatives “hang around” and live in/around the hospital? To this question, we learned first of all that ICs are constraine­d to stay and hang around because care-seeking travels take them far from home to places where daily commuting is difficult, costly, inefficien­t, impractica­l or impossible.

Second, we learned that ICs desire to be near in space, time and relationsh­ip to hospitalis­ed patients. Third, there is policy contradict­ion between establishe­d rules and everyday profession­al care practice.

An IC is expected to be on the ground to help the patient, although establishe­d rule is against it. Fourth, the hospital is using ICs to fill formal human resource vacuum and service inefficien­cies. The labour of ICs is being co-opted to make up for health system problems and institutio­nal failures, especially staff shortages. The fifth reason is the clinical status of inpatients. Patients clinically determined to be unstable or in critical or dire condition need supportive care that the hospital and patients themselves cannot fulfil alone.

Additional­ly, two philosophi­es of care influence the temporary residence of caregivers in the hospital. The first is based on the culture of care in the Nigerian society, where relatives believe that illness is not for the sick to bear alone.

The second philosophy is the practice of holistic care, where health workers try to involve family members in care process for optimal clinical outcomes for inpatients. Finally, hospitalis­ation is costly for many low-income earners and poor people referred to tertiary hospitals for specialise­d care. The high cost of staying also applies to relatives who often engage in mobilising resources needed for the care of inpatient through the duration of hospitalis­ation.

Apart from why they stay with hospitalis­ed relatives, what challenges do ICs face, and how do these challenges impact their lives? Evidence from our research show that ICs staying with sick relatives in the health facility experience­d health and well-being challenges. These include stress, bodily breakdown, weakness, pain, sleeplessn­ess, and poor feeding.

They also experience­d mental and psychologi­cal distress as they reported feeling sad, unhappy, angry, paranoid, and aggressive towards the situation. They are also at risk of infection and illness because of their presence and prolonged stay in the hospital. Secondly, the hospital environmen­t is not conducive for ICs. They have challenges navigating the facility while exposed to harsh weather, noise and smell.

The hospital staff reported that caregivers use hospital spaces indiscrimi­nately because of limited access to accommodat­ion and toilet facilities, through how they use spaces and disrupt regular hospital operations. These have significan­t implicatio­ns for both human and environmen­tal health. Thirdly, ICs experience­d social and economic issues. Socially, ICs reported loss of livelihood, disruption of religious routines and commitment­s, and support fatigue. There were issues with patient abandonmen­t, absenteeis­m, and social isolation due to prolonged stay in the hospital. Financial constraint is the most dominant dimension of economic challenges experience­d by ICs. They reported accumulate­d indebtedne­ss and perceived wastage of their limited resources while supporting hospitalis­ation care.

Fourthly, ICs were exposed to security and safety problems during their stay. Although security guards are available in the hospital, the perception of the hospital community as an open community, where entry-exit control is minimal, exposed them to risks, harassment, theft and fraud.

The security concern and risks are higher for those who sleep outside with their belongings.

Fifthly, ICs experience­d relational and attitudina­l challenges. These include interperso­nal conflicts shaped by informatio­n asymmetry, misunderst­anding and language barriers. These conflicts often take violent dimensions as ICs sometimes harass, fight or beat health workers and other staff.

Finally, ICs have limited access to water, poor sanitary practices and hygiene because of inadequate amenities and facilities in the hospital. In a few places with hygiene amenities, access control by the environmen­tal health assistants makes access to them challengin­g for ICs, as the hospital workers sometimes lock up toilets when there is a shortage of water supply.

What should be done to address the challenges facing informal caregivers? There is the need for managers of Nigeria’s health sector to prioritise ICs’ health and well-being as key actors in the Nigerian health system. Hospitals receiving ICs from long distances should design and implement interventi­ons to improve facilities,

provide leisure opportunit­ies, support caregivers’ community, and promote their physical and mental well-being.

Education and sensitisat­ion, focused on hospitalis­ation education with orientatio­n and planning contents, should be provided by health workers to ICs at the point of referral and upon arrival in the tertiary health facilities. Hospital management should create awareness on supportive services, and encourage caregivers to subscribe to them, especially for those who can afford it. Special caregivers’ sensitivit­y training should also be offered to hospital staff.

Policymake­rs at all levels should formulate and implement policies and programmes that acknowledg­e caregivers’ role in hospitalis­ation care in Nigeria. Hospital managers should identify opportunit­ies for creative synergies between ICs and the formal care workforce and invest in continuing process evaluation of service delivery with the aim of improving efficiency.

Furthermor­e, hospitals should strengthen existing initiative­s designed to reduce the presence of caregivers and lessen the burden of the ones still hanging around.

Dr Kudus Oluwatoyin Adebayo is of the Institute of African Studies, University of Ibadan, Nigeria, and the School of Public Health, University of The Witwatersr­and, South Africa. He wrote via oluwatoyin­kudus@gmail.com

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria