A qualitative exploration of the lived experience of informal caregivers of people with severe mental illness and co-existing long-term conditions
C. Carswell, J. V. E. Brown, D. Shiers, P. Coventry, N. Siddiqi

TL;DR
This study explores the challenges faced by informal caregivers of people with severe mental illness and long-term physical health conditions.
Contribution
The study provides new insights into how co-existing long-term conditions add to the caregiving burden for people with severe mental illness.
Findings
Caregivers often take on the responsibility of managing both mental and physical health due to the severity of the service users' conditions.
Caregivers face significant barriers in accessing healthcare services and experience high levels of stress and isolation.
There is a lack of support and recognition for caregivers, which negatively impacts their health and well-being.
Abstract
People with severe mental illness (SMI), including schizophrenia and bipolar disorder, experience significant health inequalities and are more likely to develop long-term physical health conditions (LTCs), such as type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease. Many people with SMI rely on informal caregivers, typically friends and family, to support their health and enable them to live in the community. Informal caregivers of people with SMI experience high levels of caregiver burden, social isolation, and poor health outcomes. However, it is unclear how co-existing LTCs contribute to the caregiving experience. The aim of this study was to explore the lived experience of informal caregivers of people with co-existing SMI and LTCs. We conducted a qualitative study with informal caregivers of people with co-existing SMI and LTCs in England. We recruited 12 informal caregivers and conducted…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFamily Caregiving in Mental Illness · Intergenerational Family Dynamics and Caregiving · Family Support in Illness
