Forgiveness psychoeducation reduces death anxiety and burden in end-of-life caregivers over one to three months
This randomized controlled trial enrolled 56 caregivers of patients at the end of life. The sample was divided into an experimental group of 28 participants and a control group of 28 participants. The setting was not reported. The study phase and publication type were not reported.
The intervention consisted of forgiveness psychoeducation delivered to the experimental group. The comparator was no intervention for the control group. The primary outcomes assessed were death anxiety, caregiver burden, and forgiveness tendencies. Secondary outcomes were not reported.
At one-month and three-month follow-ups, death anxiety and caregiving burden were statistically significantly lower in the experimental group compared to the control group. The P value was less than .05. Absolute numbers and effect sizes were not reported. Adverse events, serious adverse events, discontinuations, and tolerability were not reported.
The study design supports a causal relationship between forgiveness psychoeducation and reduced death anxiety or burden. The practice relevance indicates that psychoeducation on forgiveness can positively influence communication, emotions, and spiritual development of caregivers, improving the quality of care. Funding or conflicts of interest were not reported.