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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2017 Nov 9.
Published in final edited form as: Heart Lung. 2013 Mar 14;42(3):195–201. doi: 10.1016/j.hrtlng.2012.10.004

Table 3.

Themes and exemplar quotes.

Excerpts of caregiver comments
Adaptation within the role “You just accept the changes and adjust.”
“It did not matter what I had to do, I learned to do it.”
Caring for a spouse with HF “The only thing he could do was breathe—that took all of his energy, all he could do is sit in his chair with his oxygen.”
“It was all on me, I had to keep working; I carried the insurance, and it was all on memldr;caring for him, the house, the appointments, making sure he had all of his meds at the right time and the right amountmldr;everything. It was overwhelming. It was dragging us all down but we did the best we could.”
“He was doing well, thenmldr;just the ups and downs. He would fill up with fluid and then the next option would be a pacer. He would do well and then the fluid. Next it was the ICD. We were getting back to normal and then he would fill up with fluidmldr;; what a roller coaster. I just kept thinking, ‘what are they going to do next and what if nothing else could be done?’”
Decision made “Not really an option, he needed it to save his life.”
“LVAD or hospice—what would you pick?”
“Not that I would change my decision but I had to make it without him. He was so sick, he was out of it. The times he is not doing well [with the LVAD], I feel guilty, I wonder if he would have made the same decision.”
Caring for a spouse with an LVAD-DT “I felt like I was a new mom again caring for a newborn, I just hovered; I slept when he did and I was awake when he was.”
“I felt prepared to go home when we were in the hospital, but the first time the alarm went off at home, I was in a complete panic. The [health care providers] were not there to help me if I could not get it figured out.”
“I just pray that if something happens, the weather is good and they can fly him to [tertiary medical center]. It is obvious when we come into the emergency room how unfamiliar the staff is with his condition and equipment.”
“I wonder what life would be like for us if he was living with HF.”
“How long is this going to last?”