Background: The social needs of rural families facing cancer warrant investigation to inform psychosocial care planning and policy development.

Methods: Using purposive sampling, we interviewed 24 rural caregivers and 17 hospital staff from an academic cancer center in the U.S. South. Social needs were defined as the support needed to effectively provide informal caregiving across economic, physical, interpersonal, and service domains. We used the framework method to code and synthesize findings.

Findings: Caregiver economic and physical needs were interconnected and most pressing, including common examples of distance to care and transportation barriers. Caregivers desired additional support from the health system, insurance providers, and community resources. Staff identified similar need patterns and gaps in health system capacity.

Conclusions: Rural cancer caregivers experience multiple unmet social needs. Supportive interventions for this population will benefit from flexible implementation and multilevel, multisector approaches. In particular, interventions that address financial hardship and limited internet access are needed.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10083183PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/07347332.2022.2129547DOI Listing

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