How Culture Shapes Informal Caregiver Motivations: A Meta-Ethnographic Review

Research output: Contribution to journalReview articlepeer-review

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How Culture Shapes Informal Caregiver Motivations: A Meta-Ethnographic Review. / Zarzycki, Mikołaj; Seddon, Diane; Bei, Eva et al.
In: Qualitative Health Research, Vol. 32, No. 10, 08.2022, p. 1574-1589.

Research output: Contribution to journalReview articlepeer-review

HarvardHarvard

Zarzycki, M, Seddon, D, Bei, E, Dekel, R & Morrison, V 2022, 'How Culture Shapes Informal Caregiver Motivations: A Meta-Ethnographic Review', Qualitative Health Research, vol. 32, no. 10, pp. 1574-1589. https://doi.org/10.1177/10497323221110356

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MLA

Zarzycki, Mikołaj et al. "How Culture Shapes Informal Caregiver Motivations: A Meta-Ethnographic Review". Qualitative Health Research. 2022, 32(10). 1574-1589. https://doi.org/10.1177/10497323221110356

VancouverVancouver

Zarzycki M, Seddon D, Bei E, Dekel R, Morrison V. How Culture Shapes Informal Caregiver Motivations: A Meta-Ethnographic Review. Qualitative Health Research. 2022 Aug;32(10):1574-1589. Epub 2022 Jun 23. doi: 10.1177/10497323221110356

Author

Zarzycki, Mikołaj ; Seddon, Diane ; Bei, Eva et al. / How Culture Shapes Informal Caregiver Motivations: A Meta-Ethnographic Review. In: Qualitative Health Research. 2022 ; Vol. 32, No. 10. pp. 1574-1589.

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - How Culture Shapes Informal Caregiver Motivations: A Meta-Ethnographic Review

AU - Zarzycki, Mikołaj

AU - Seddon, Diane

AU - Bei, Eva

AU - Dekel, Rachel

AU - Morrison, Valerie

N1 - The PhD was funded by EC funded Marie Skłodowska-Curie Innovative Training Network (H2020-MSCA-ITN-2018)

PY - 2022/8

Y1 - 2022/8

N2 - The provision of informal care presents a significant global challenge. To better understand how cultural factors underpin and shape motivations and willingness to provide informal care for adults, an in-depth qualitative synthesis was conducted. Six electronic databases and a wide range of additional sources were searched. Following meta-ethnographic guidelines, 37 qualitative studies were synthesised. Six main concepts were identified: cultural self-identity, which appeared as an overarching explanatory concept; cultural duty and obligations; cultural values; love and emotional attachments; repayment and reciprocity; and competing demands and roles. These concepts informed a model of cultural caregiving motivations, offering an inductive-based exploration of key cultural motivators and highlighting implications for theory development, future research, policy and practice. The model holds implications for the actual exchange of care. Caregiver motivations should not be taken for granted by healthcare or social care professionals involved in assessment and support planning, educational endeavours at a population level may support caregiving, and support should be sensitive to cultural caregiving motivations.

AB - The provision of informal care presents a significant global challenge. To better understand how cultural factors underpin and shape motivations and willingness to provide informal care for adults, an in-depth qualitative synthesis was conducted. Six electronic databases and a wide range of additional sources were searched. Following meta-ethnographic guidelines, 37 qualitative studies were synthesised. Six main concepts were identified: cultural self-identity, which appeared as an overarching explanatory concept; cultural duty and obligations; cultural values; love and emotional attachments; repayment and reciprocity; and competing demands and roles. These concepts informed a model of cultural caregiving motivations, offering an inductive-based exploration of key cultural motivators and highlighting implications for theory development, future research, policy and practice. The model holds implications for the actual exchange of care. Caregiver motivations should not be taken for granted by healthcare or social care professionals involved in assessment and support planning, educational endeavours at a population level may support caregiving, and support should be sensitive to cultural caregiving motivations.

KW - informal caregiving

KW - meta-ethnography

KW - Culture

KW - self-identity

KW - motivations to provide care

KW - willingness to provide care

KW - systematic review

U2 - 10.1177/10497323221110356

DO - 10.1177/10497323221110356

M3 - Review article

C2 - 35737473

VL - 32

SP - 1574

EP - 1589

JO - Qualitative Health Research

JF - Qualitative Health Research

SN - 1049-7323

IS - 10

ER -