RESEARCH
Elderly caring for the elderly: spirituality as tensions relief
Idosos cuidando de idosos: a espiritualidade como alívio das tensões
Ancianos que cuidan a los ancianos: la espiritualidad como alivio de las tensiones
Monalisa Claudia Maria da SilvaI, Alexander Moreira-AlmeidaI, Edna Aparecida Barbosa de CastroI
I
Universidade Federal de Juiz de Fora. Juiz de Fora, Minas Gerais, Brazil.
How to cite this article:
Silva MCM, Moreira-Almeida A, Castro EAB. Elderly caring for the elderly: spirituality as tensions’ relief.
Rev Bras Enferm [Internet]. 2018;71(5):2461-8. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/0034-7167-2017-0370
Submission: 05-15-2017
Approval: 02-01-2018
ABSTRACT
Objective: To investigate the forms of coping used to relieve tensions by elderly caregivers of elderly relatives and to know the
type of support they receive from the Primary Health Care service at home. Method: A qualitative study with a theoreticalmethodological contribution of Grounded Theory, carried out with 10 elderly caregivers interviewed between August 2014 and
January 2015. Results: Participants use primarily religious coping to deal with adverse situations that arise in their lives; they
attribute to the sacred the strength to continue to age and care for another elderly person at home. Religiousness was the main
coping strategy used by the participants, but little recognized by the health service. Final considerations: It is recommended
that the Primary Health Care service provide greater support to these caregivers and be attentive to the spiritual dimension as an
auxiliary element in the process of comprehensive and inclusive health care of these elderly caregivers.
Descriptors: Aging; Caregivers; Elderly; Spirituality; Primary Health Care.
RESUMO
Objetivo: Investigar as formas de enfrentamento utilizadas para alívio de tensões por cuidadores idosos de familiares idosos e conhecer
o tipo de apoio que recebem do serviço de Atenção Primária à Saúde no domicílio. Método: Estudo qualitativo, com aporte teóricometodológico da Grounded Theory, realizado com 10 cuidadores idosos entrevistados, entre agosto de 2014 e janeiro de 2015.
Resultados: Os participantes utilizam-se prioritariamente do coping religioso para enfrentar situações adversas que surjam em suas
vidas; atribuem ao sagrado a força para continuar a envelhecer e cuidar de outro idoso no domicílio. A religiosidade foi a principal
estratégia de enfrentamento utilizada pelos participantes, porém, pouco reconhecida pelo serviço de saúde. Considerações finais:
Recomenda-se que o serviço de Atenção Primária à Saúde proporcione maior apoio a esses cuidadores e que esteja atento à dimensão
espiritual como elemento auxiliar no processo de assistência integral e inclusiva à saúde desses cuidadores idosos.
Descritores: Envelhecimento; Cuidadores; Idoso; Espiritualidade; Assistência Primária à Saúde.
RESUMEN
Objetivo: Investigar las formas de enfrentamiento utilizadas para alivio de tensiones por cuidadores ancianos de familiares ancianos y
conocer el tipo de apoyo que reciben del servicio de Atención Primaria a la Salud en el domicilio. Método: Estudio cualitativo, con
aporte teórico-metodológico de la Grounded Theory, realizado con 10 cuidadores ancianos entrevistados, entre agosto de 2014 y enero
de 2015. Resultados: Los participantes se utilizan prioritariamente del coping religioso para enfrentar situaciones adversas que surgen
en sus vidas; atribuyen al sagrado la fuerza para continuar envejeciendo y cuidar de otro anciano en el domicilio. La religiosidad fue la
principal estrategia de enfrentamiento utilizada por los participantes, pero poco reconocida por el servicio de salud. Consideraciones
finales: Se recomienda que el servicio de Atención Primaria a la Salud proporcione mayor apoyo a esos cuidadores y que esté atento a
la dimensión espiritual como elemento auxiliar en el proceso de asistencia integral e inclusiva a la salud de esos cuidadores ancianos.
Descriptores: Envejecimiento; Cuidadores; Ancianos; Espiritualidad; Asistencia Primaria a la Salud.
CORRESPONDING AUTHOR
Monalisa Claudia Maria da Silva
http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/0034-7167-2017-0370
E-mail: monalisacms13@gmail.com
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INTRODUCTION
The last half of the twentieth century witnessed a worldwide
demographic transition, understood as a longevity revolution(1).
Although the timing and pace of transition are different between
developed and developing countries, the framework for change is
typically similar(2). The aging process has evolved rapidly in developing
countries that have experienced a rapid process of epidemiological
transition(3). In Brazil, population projections tend to reduce youth
and the aging of the population in the coming decades(4).
Primary Health Care (PHC) has in the Family Health Strategy
(FHS) the proposal for a reorganization of health care, with emphasis on the practice of continuing integral health care for the
elderly, being close to the community and allowing a harmonious
performance with the reality experienced by the elderly in the
family context(5). The health care network has not addressed the
needs of the elderly and their caregivers. The home visit (HV)
aimed at this public, for example, is not always satisfactorily
performed due to the incomplete and incomplete multiprofessional team, as well as infrastructure deficiencies of the BHU(6).
Because of the aging process, there is a probability of developing chronic sickness and/or disability. There are elderly
people who, in addition to being subject to this reality, informally
take care of another elderly relative at home. By becoming a
caregiver, he coexists with a threat to his self-care, well-being,
physical, emotional overload and social isolation(7). The role
of the caregiver has been widely explored by the researches in
the area of gerontology and Collective Health, however, there
is a difficulty in recognizing and a way to support the needs
arising from the activities carried out by caregivers, especially
from their perspective(8-9).
The needs of the elderly caregiver of an elderly relative, especially dependents, translate into high loads of activities and
stress that reflect on their physical, psychological and emotional
health, with implications for both(10). A study that evaluated
factors associated with stress perceived by elderly caregivers
revealed significantly elevated values in relation to pain and
difficulty in self-reported sleep and poor self-assessment in
relation to health(11).
There is a considerable literature on caregivers in general(12),
however, there is a gap regarding studies on the elderly family
caregiver. No systematic actions are identified with evaluation
and health care of those who care for the patient, such as the
“family caregiver”(13). As a result, the work they carry out is of
low visibility and the support required to perform such a function is scarce. It is understood that, in order to offer care that
includes the caregiver and his family member, it is necessary
for the professionals to know the context of the life, culture and
belief system in which they are inserted(14).
Although the process of redemocratization of the rights of
the elderly has advanced with the Federal Constitution of 1988,
there is a greater vulnerability of the elderly person as the age
progresses. The World Health Organization (WHO) defines the
basis for a healthy aging, based on the social inclusion of the
elderly, highlighting equity and integrality in access to health
care, and the continued development of actions to promote
health and prevent diseases(15).
In this sense, it is relevant to know the elderly caregiver’s
daily life and the stress coping strategies of this significant
portion of the population that has little visibility, but which
plays an important role in public health: caring for the elderly
in domicile, being elderly. In order to help fill this gap, it is essential that studies be developed in this area so that the voice
of these elderly caregivers can be heard: what they think, what
their challenges, resources and needs are.
OBJECTIVE
To investigate the forms of coping for stress relief used by
elderly caregivers of elderly relatives and to know the type of
support they receive from Primary Health Care at home.
METHOD
Ethical aspects
The research was approved by the Research Ethics Committee by the Universidade Federal de Juiz de Fora.
Type of study and theoretical and methodological framework
Research of qualitative nature, carried out with the contribution
of Grounded Theory, which in Brazil obtained the translation
of Teoria Fundamentada nos Dados (TFD). In this research, we
adopted the guidance of Anselm Straus and Juliet Corbin, for
whom the data collection by the researcher himself in scenario
of occurrence; the analysis and the possible theory maintain
a close relation between them, allowing, through codification
procedures, to construct instead of testing a theory(16).
We chose this method because it allows the substantive
theorization about the phenomenon of home care to the elderly
by an elderly family member, with the merit of contributing to
professionals who need knowledge to deal with this problematic
and emerging situation in the current context care of the elderly.
In this approach, the primary objective is the discovery of the
variables and not their control having one of its characteristics
the grounding of the concepts in data. It seeks to balance researchers’ science and creativity, which is essential, “to nominate
categories, to ask encouraging questions, to make comparisons
and to draw an innovative, integrated and realistic scheme of
raw, disorganized masses of data, which can generate assumptions or hypotheses”(16).
Methodological procedures
Study setting and participants
The survey was conducted in the Northern Zone of a municipality of Minas Gerais, whose estimated population for the year 2014
was 550,710(17), and 13.7% were 60 years or older(18). According
to the Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics (IBGE)(19), the
Northern Zone had 85,615 inhabitants distributed in an extensive
urban area, located far from the center of the city, where the main
institutions of care and attention to the health of the elderly.
Ten elderly caregivers of another elderly person of the family
residing in the area of the Basic Health Unit (BHU) participated
in the study.
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We can find the categories: “Elderly caregiver who cares daily
for an elderly person at home and the health team” and “The
spiritual dimension influencing the life and process of caring
for the elderly family caregiver”.
The inclusion criteria were: age ≥ 60 years; be primarily
responsible for the care of an elderly family member at home;
live with him and reside in the area covered by BHU of the
Northern Zone of the municipality studied. No testimonial was
excluded because the contents of all were sufficient to meet
the research objectives.
The sampling group was constituted by convenience, indicating the nurse, community health agent (CHA) of the FHS
or merchants of the neighborhoods surveyed, at the request
of the researcher visiting the neighborhoods. The sample size
and final composition were determined by the saturation of the
codes during the data analysis process(16).
RESULTS
The age of family caregivers surveyed ranged from 60 to 90
years. Three caregivers did not live with the companion; eight
were women, distributed under wives and daughters; two were
responsible for the care of another dependent relative, in addition to the elderly. Their income is the source of retirement or
pension, and two caregivers do not have any type of personal
income, depending on the children or family members they
care for. It should be noted that all caregivers had at least one
chronic non-communicable disease (Chart 1).
Collection and data organization
Data collection was performed between August 2014 and
January 2015, through a semi-structured interview, during the HV,
previously scheduled from the contact
with the neighborhood informant/BHU.
Chart 1 – Introducing the caregivers
To guide the interview, questions were
asked about aging and becoming a careMarital
Relationship
Gender
Family
Name Age
status
with the
Religion
giver, how the institutionalized support
*
Nucleus
**
cared-for
received when caring for the other and
Husband (93) and Husband and two
how to seek relief from everyday tensions.
Adameire 90
F
M
Lapsed Spiritist
daughter (67)
daughters
Each testimony took on average 55
minutes, recorded with digital recorder,
Isabel
60
F
W
Mother (97)
Mother
Lapsed Catholic
transcribed and analyzed before the next
interview. During the interview, there were
Dina
61
F
D
Mother (86)
Mother
Lapsed Catholic
no other people in the (private) room, other
than the informant and the researcher, in orMother (94) and
Mother, brother
Lia
60
F
D
Lapsed Catholic
brother (57)
and daughter
der to leave them free to express themselves.
All the caregivers contacted agreed
Joshua
70
F
M
Father (93)
Husband e Father
Catholic
to participate in the research and signed
Gedeão 61
M
M
Wife (74)
Wife
Evangelical
the Informed Consent Term. To ensure
anonymity, informants were identified
Talita
79
F
M
Husband (81)
Wife and daughter
Catholic
by using biblical names.
Ruth
66
F
M
Husband (86)
Husband and
stepson
Evangelical
Data analysis
Samuel 79
M
M
Wife (74)
Wife
Catholic
For the textual edition of the empirical data, software was used, the program
Eunice 73
F
M
Wife
Husband
Lapsed Evangelical
OpenLogos®, version 1.0.2. The data
**
Nota - Gênero* – F = Feminino / M = Masculino; Estado civil – D = Divorciado / C = Casado / V = Viúvo/a.
analysis was concomitant with the data
collection and in three distinct phases that
complement each other in the data integration: open, axial and
Category 1: Elderly caregiver who cares daily for an elderly
selective coding. In open coding, the data were analyzed line by
person at home and the health team
line and compared by similarities and differences, generating a
According to the participants, the care offered has not provided
codification of the data. In the axial coding, for each code of the
them with care needs and, in some cases, they do not have a FHS
previous phase a related concept was developed in order to identify
as a reference. Thus, without proper support, care is exclusively on
it transversally to the data collected, establishing a preliminary
the elderly caregiver and with sporadic actions of the health team.
analogy between categories and subcategories. In the selective
Caregivers, when asked who they are cared for, did not cite the
coding, the integration and refinement of the categories occurs
FHS as a reference. However, they reported receiving CHA visits:
so that the results of the research make it possible to reach the
It will be two and a half years since we are living here, except
central category of the study and through the consistency of the
the CHA, no one came, no doctor, no nurse. [...] After I moved
data, validate the theory(16).
here, they have never done proper follow-up, neither for me
Based on the identified categories and established theoretical
nor for her, they don’t do it. (Gedeão)
relations, it was possible to develop an analytical and explanatory
process of the actions and interactions that formed the process
In this research, we identified the importance of the practice
of caring for an elderly person by an elderly family caregiver.
of active listening with the elderly. Participants reported feeling
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“valued and relieved” by qualified listening. When this practice
occurred, during the interviews with the researcher, all the caregivers explained this through the lines, as in the following examples:
According to the participants, the fragilities arising from the
aging process, identified on a daily basis can be relieved when
one believes in God. Prayer was the main religious practice that
emerged from the experiences of all of them:
I would like to thank you for coming, for listening to me, oh!
No one has ever stopped to listen to me, [...] if you want to
come back, you will always be very welcome. (Dina)
A prayer helps a lot, because we get closer to God as we talk
to him, right? And we pray. (Joshua)
It’s the first time anyone has ever listened to me. How good
it is! Thank God, when you talk to a person you feel new
again [...] it’s always good to talk to people who listen to you,
talking helps to solve problems. (Gedeão)
According to the reports obtained, the elderly caregiver, who
is suffering from chronic diseases and has the role of caring fully,
sometimes alone at home. Moreover, this elderly ends up being
deprived of activities outside home, due to the difficulty of lack
of a companion to replace it in the care provided to the elderly
relative, which restricts their space and their social network:
Only for God, you have to have a lot of faith, ask for much
protection to him. This is what I do every day in the morning. (Lia)
On the other hand, in addition to prayer, all participants
reported the importance of frequent religious practice in cults
and other religious commitments, as a support in coping with
misfortunes that arise during life:
I go to church every Sunday, when I don’t go on Saturday, I
go on Sunday. (Isabel)
God gives me strength, because I live in a prison without walls [...].
He, despite being this way, does not stand still, and I can’t leave
him alone [...] I can’t go to the doctor because it is very difficult
to schedule, so I end up buying the medicine on my own. (Ruth)
Category 2: The spiritual dimension influencing the life and
process of caring for the elderly family caregiver
The reports of the present study demonstrated that the elderly
often practice intrinsic religiosity, which provides mechanisms
of adaptation and strength for coping in times of crisis:
I don’t drink a drop of water in the morning, while I don’t
thank God, I thank for my life, the lives of my children, my
husband. [...] I believe that God gives strength, and everyone,
everything that we meet is due to his will, if we fail to understand or desire his presence with us, we have no life, our life
is the divine light, is God’s strength. (Adameire)
My strength comes from God, the day I don’t pray, I feel like
I’m missing something, it’s the faith I have in God, regardless
of family and anything, what moves is the faith I have in God.
He’s always in my life, always at his discretion. (Samuel)
I watch Father Marcelo’s mass on TV and I go to church every
week, because Father Marcelo’s Mass is only for those who
can’t go to church. (Samuel)
When they experienced a recovery in health, considered impossible, one of the participants credited the event to prayer and faith:
Well, I started taking caring for him when he had stroke, [...]
he was hospitalized for many months and was practically
inactive. The doctor, when he saw him walking again, said
it was a miracle, but prayer has power [...], and, thanks God,
I take care of him today. (Ruth)
From the data previously described, we could see that the
participants seek help in a transcendent force to persevere in
their way, aging and caring for elderly people, at home. In their
statements, there was presence of the spiritual religious coping
in the confrontation of the adversities of life. Chart 2 shows the
positive coping strategies used by the caregivers participating in
this study, in their daily lives. The types of coping strategies were
based on the Religious-Spiritual Coping Scale (SRCOPE scale)(20-21).
Chart 2 – Coping strategies commonly used by caregivers participating in the study
Factors
Strategy used
Participants who used them
Actions for spiritual assistance
Attending religious or spiritual services
Adameire, Isabel, Dina, Lia, Joshua,
Gedeão, Talita, Ruth
Helping others
Praying for the well-being of others
Everyone
Positive attitude towards God
Actions for Institutional Assistance
Seeking love and protection of God
Everyone
Believing that God is always with them
Everyone
Searching force, support and guidance in God
Everyone
Praying to God that everything will be well
Everyone
Feeling God is working for him
Everyone
Establishing a greater connection with God
Everyone
Listening and/or singing religious songs
Adameire, Isabel, Dina, Lia, Joshua,
Gedeão, Talita, Ruth, Eunice
Continua
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Quadro 2 (cont.)
Factors
Actions for Institutional Assistance
Personal search for spiritual
knowledge
Strategy used
Participants who used them
Performing spiritual acts or rites (any action
specifically related to your belief: sign of the
cross, confession, prayer of the rosary, fasting,
purification rituals, citation of proverbs,
intonation of mantras, psychography, etc.)
Everyone
Participating in religious or spiritual practices,
activities, or festivities
Isabel, Joshua, Gedeão,
Going to a religious temple, seeking the house of
God
Isabel, Joshua, Gedeão, Ruth, Samuel
Keep a place for prayer at home
Everyone
Seeking help in sacred books (Bible and other)
/ reading spiritual/religious teachings books to
understand and deal with adversity
Everyone
Watching religious programs or movies
dedicated to spirituality
DISCUSSION
Participants having to take care of the elderly family member
alone have mentioned the lack of support from FHS professionals
and the lack of qualified listening. In this sense, the institutional
support of a multiprofessional team is relevant.
The daily life of elderly people who take care of an elderly
relative must be recognized by professionals working at PHC,
currently defined as the preferred door of the health system,
since it plays an essential role in Health Care, in the support
to these caregivers and to elderly relatives of those who they
care. However, what was perceived with the data analysis
was a deficit in the health needs of the caregiver-elderly and
elderly-care binomial, pointed out by those who seek care
in the network services, the BHU and the FHS team through
consultations and especially in HV. The implementation of the
elderly health care network has still been slow and fragmented;
incomplete FHS with difficulty in selecting families/elderlies
who really need home care(6).
Scientific literature shows that the task of caring for dependent
elderly people in the home can generate adverse effects to the
caregiver, causing negative impacts and physical, emotional,
social and financial burden. Thus, there is a need to develop
programs to prevent these effects and to work towards the quality
of life of the caregiver. It is relevant to research and implement
practices with better evidence of cost-effectiveness, such as: in
which situations HV should be done, how caregiver training
should be done and what tasks should be trained(10,22).
The health professional can evaluate the support network of
the elderly and maintain the home monitoring for the supervision of the care, in addition to offering appropriate support.
The importance of the family is ensured, but care must be
taken to ensure that it does not take care of itself but is aided
by PHC and a network of social relations, serving as support
in times of need and crisis(7). In this way, we should highlight
the importance of therapeutic listening, dialogue process and
language adaptation during the care of the elderly. Assistance
based on the interpersonal relationship with a view to the integral care of the human being will favor the attendance of the
Everyone
health needs of this population, through the speech, listening,
connection and negotiation(5).
In order for the FHS to develop a process of construction of
new practices, it is imperative that the professionals involved
articulate an integrated, interdisciplinary dimension, a knowledge
relationship and articulation between knowledge and common
care for the development of teamwork(7).
Participants are primarily concerned with spiritual religious
coping, defined as the use of religious beliefs and behaviors
aimed at facilitating problem solving, preventing or relieving the
negative emotional implications experienced in an emotionally
critical circumstance(23). Respondents often stated that, with the
support of family members, the process of caring for the other
becomes lighter; but without the fulfillment of their spiritual
needs, there would be a weakening, relative to their empowerment. They relate to discover in God the strength to face life
and the care of the other, as well as to the very consciousness
of aging. It was unanimous among the study participants the
importance of religiosity and spirituality in their lives.
The interface between spirituality and health is a relatively new
area of research, but it is developing rapidly. Research on R/S (Religiosity/Spirituality) shows great influence of this dimension on the
physical and mental health of individuals(24). Although the impact
of R/S is often positive on health and coping with adversity, it can
also be negative if it is associated with poorer health indicators(25).
Spirituality has its meaning, the search for the meaning of
life(26), and has always been a scenario contradictory to scientific
rationality. With the recognition by the WHO of the importance
of spirituality for quality of life, it has come to be considered an
important field of evaluation and health promotion in all phases
and ages. And in the stage of aging, spirituality comes from
the ability to endure mishaps, difficulties and losses intrinsic
to this phase, where there is a diversity of spiritual experience,
having in common the recognition of its relevance to aging
with quality of life(27).
In a study to investigate the spiritual-family experience and
its influence on health among elderly couples, participants
reported that family spirituality improves communication and
strengthens family relationships, corroborates family health,
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improves emotional well-being, development of healthy new
behaviors, as well as providing healing experiences(28).
There is evidence(26,29) that R/S are factors usually integrated
positively to psychological well-being, satisfaction in living, happiness, improvement of physical and mental health, in addition
to being correlated with decreased morbidity and mortality.
In the last decades, literature reviews have been published
on the relationship between R/S and physiological processes,
including cortisol decrease(30) and increase in immunological
factors(31). These findings have also been replicated in Brazilian
elderly(32-33). Consistent with the results of the present study, in
which participants believe that seeking God’s help can help
them cope better with difficulties and tensions, it has been
identified that prayer can affect their lives over the years(34). In
another study, caregivers reported that one form of care is faith,
when 98% of them claimed to have a religious belief. For them,
faith is a way of caring for oneself that promotes strength and
hope to continue in the care of the dependent elderly relative,
in addition to the other daily tasks(35).
In a literature review, we examined the effects of R/S on health,
such as cognitive functioning, survival strategies, and quality
of life in elderly people with dementia. The results highlight
possible benefits of R/S for health, from different aspects, among
them, the use of spirituality or faith in everyday life, allowing
people to develop coping strategies and acceptance of their
illness, maintain their relationships , hope and find meaning
in their lives, thus improving their quality of life(36).
The health professional, by rephrasing his practice, according to the ideology of care proposed for the FHS, can access
the spiritual dimension as a support for the different therapies,
strengthening the perspective of integral care, with quality and
resolution. When the professional turns to the values, beliefs
and spirituality of the person cared for, through the reception
with qualified listening, it makes possible the understanding,
the hope, the relief of the pain and the suffering of the user.
In order for the health professional to be able to access the
spiritual dimension of the user, it is essential to have a reliable
link, in addition to identifying the right moment to approach
the subject, and to make use of common sense. This approach
may occur during the anamnesis, quite naturally, and although
there is no “recipe” for the spiritual approach, it is considered a
great opportunity the moment when the patient himself brings
the matter to the surface, demonstrating the importance that it
exercises in your life(37).
However, many health professionals still find it difficult to address the issue of patients’ R/S(38). Therefore, several publications
have addressed how to integrate R/S in an ethical and responsible
way, based on scientific evidence, in clinical care(36,39). In order
to facilitate the approach of spirituality for health professionals,
tools have been developed to obtain the spiritual history of the
patient. When lack of time is a problem, it is important to note
that some tools can be applied in a few minutes, as is the case
with the FICA Questionnaire(36,40). If the elderly report is not
religious, the health professional should direct their questions
to questions about what promotes a meaning and purpose in
their life and how they understand their illness and the problems
they are facing in order to investigate which beliefs can impact
your treatment and prognosis(37).
Study limitations
It is worth mentioning that this is a convenience sample,
and this limitation was because there is no record of the total
number of elderly family caregivers in the FHS areas. Thus,
the study was based on indications, which can lead to bias,
mainly because there was no participant who presented forms
of negative coping or carelessness to the family member. The
study was carried out among family caregivers of low-income
elderly people in a middle-eastern city of Brazil. We must take
care in order not to extrapolate these findings to other contexts.
Contributions to the area of nursing, health and public
policies
The results of this study bring as contributions to professional
practice evidences that awaken the professional to integrate
the spiritual dimension to clinical practice, considering the
importance of this practice during the aging process. For the
formation, the study reinforces the relevance of the theme of
spirituality being transversal to undergraduate and postgraduate curricula of health professionals. The findings reinforce the
need for public policies to care for the family caregiver of the
elderly, especially the elderly who cares for another elderly
person at home.
FINAL CONSIDERATIONS
This study explains the stress situations that the elderly
caregivers of an elderly family member pass; the little support
received from the PHC service; and that R/S is the main coping
strategy employed to cope with daily stress relief. The PHC/
FHS service plays an essential role in the care, functioning as
a support to the elderly family caregivers and to the elderly
relatives of the caregivers.
We hope that the spiritual dimension will be considered as an
auxiliary element in the healthcare process. At this stage of life,
spirituality is pronounced, as the elderly person is introspective,
thoughtful and evaluative throughout his life. It is necessary
to foster new research in order to recognize the needs of this
population and to develop support strategies.
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