# Exploring motivations of peer supporters for caregivers of patients with hematological malignancies—a qualitative study

**Authors:** Cæcilie Borregaard Myrhøj, Iben Husted Nielsen, Camilla Louise Visler, Kristina Holmegaard Nørskov, Karin Piil, Mary Jarden

PMC · DOI: 10.1007/s00520-025-09283-2 · Supportive Care in Cancer · 2025-02-26

## TL;DR

This study explores why caregivers volunteer as peer supporters for others and how their motivation changes during the process.

## Contribution

The study identifies evolving motivations and the role of feedback and networking in sustaining peer support.

## Key findings

- Four main themes drive motivation: past experiences, moral obligation, meaningful use of personal experiences, and guiding new caregivers.
- Feedback from recipients and participation in network meetings significantly influence motivation during the program.
- Networking meetings provide ongoing support and help sustain peer supporters' motivation.

## Abstract

Social support interventions, particularly peer support from former family caregivers, offer unique assistance to caregivers of newly diagnosed patients. Since voluntary peer support is driven by personal choice, understanding the motivations for participating and how motivation evolves over time is essential. This study explores the motivations for becoming a peer support provider for family caregivers of patients with hematological malignancies and how motivation changes over time.

This qualitative study encompasses 18 semi-structured interviews with family caregivers providing peer support (N = 11) at two time points: (1) just after certification as peer supporters but prior to starting the peer support program and (2) at the 6-week mark of their 12-week peer support program. Interpretive phenomenological analysis was used to analyze the data.

Motivation for participating in a voluntary peer-to-peer support program as a peer support provider center on four main themes: “Driven by past experiences”, “Moral obligation is intrinsic to identity”, “Meaningful use of personal experiences”, and “Guiding new caregivers”. Motivation was influenced during the support program, particularly by the presence or absence of feedback from family caregivers and by participation in network meetings with other peer support providers.

This study emphasizes the importance of networking meetings for family caregiver peer support providers, as they facilitate exchange of knowledge and insights and discussion of challenges and rewards and provide an ongoing support and motivation. It also highlights the untapped potential of volunteering to provide unique social support benefiting both the family caregiver recipient of support and the support provider.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** hematological malignancies (MESH:D019337)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

8 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11865170/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11865170