Positive life stories of Stroke-Survivor's spousal caregiving in Hong Kong: Lessons for policy and practice

Esther O.W. Chow*, Yuk Yi Wong, Yuen Hung Fok, Xu Liao, Chaoyu Li

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Journal Publications and ReviewsRGC 21 - Publication in refereed journalpeer-review

11 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Background: Advances in medical-care for immediately post-stroke mean that many stroke-survivors now live a normal lifespan, although they may suffer residual disability. They are often cared for at home by their spouse, who may be ill-prepared for this task, and may also have health concerns. As demands on formal services increase with population aging in Hong Kong, equipping spousal-caregivers with positive effective caring strategies is increasingly important.
Objective: To understand what constitutes positive spousal-caregiving for stroke-survivors in Hong Kong within the cultural lens of ‘Zhong (Loyalty)’
Method: Naturalistic qualitative research was employed to hear stories about positive caregiving from Hong Kong couples living with stroke sequelae. Three in-depth face-to-face semi-structured interviews were undertaken with eleven dyads (stroke-survivor alone, spousal-caregiver alone, then the couple together). Data validation was by member-checking, further questions, and feedback at a second interview, and corroboration by field-notes.
Findings: A strength-based interactive model of positive spousal-caregiving was described, whose core tenet was Zhong (Loyalty). This fostered, and in turn was nurtured by, three paired key behaviours (1. Learning new skills linked with satisfaction when efforts paid off; 2. Utilizing formal and informal resources linked with supporting others; 3. Cherishing and bringing out the best linked with managing life- and self-care). Couples’ capacity to develop these behaviours reflected their inner strengths.
Conclusions: Couples who practiced positive caring and were resilient in the face of adversity were likely to optimise dyadic health and deal constructively with unexpected challenges. To address a looming shortfall between client need, and formal health and social services in Hong Kong, evidence-based policies are required to support effective, positive community-based spousal-caregiving.
Original languageEnglish
Article number114476
JournalSocial Science & Medicine
Volume291
Online published11 Oct 2021
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Dec 2021

Research Keywords

  • Older couples
  • Spousal-caregiving
  • Chinese marital values
  • Dyadic coping
  • Resilience

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