“…If there are available carers, then they need practical, emotional, and social help and support in their caring role (Rosenberg, Horsfall, Leonard, & Noonan, 2015), with many older carers equally unwell (McKechnie, MacLeod, & Jaye, 2011). Expectations of family members in care-giving roles at the end of life are high, with overwhelming financial, emotional, and physical challenges De Korte-Verhoef et al, 2014), albeit often counterbalanced with descriptions of life altering rewards (Anderson & White, 2018). Despite this, families are increasingly expected to take on this caring role (Thomas et al, 2018).Caring can then often fail in the community, with dying taken back into hospital, due to these considerations of overwhelming family carer burden, and the economic costs of being ill (Gardiner, McDermott, & Hulme, 2017).…”