We found a match
Your institution may have rights to this item. Sign in to continue.
- Title
Long-term Care Placement of Dementia Patients and Caregiver Health and Well-being.
- Authors
Schulz, Richard; Belle, Steven H.; Czaja, Sara J.; McGinnis, Kathleen A.; Stevens, Alan; Zhang, Song
- Abstract
Context Placing a relative with dementia into a long-term care facility is common among caregivers. Placement transition and factors that affect caregiver health and well-being after placement of the patient are not well described. Objective To assess the impact of placing a relative with dementia in a long-term care facility on caregivers' health and well-being. Design, Setting, and Participants Prospective study from 1996 to 2000 of the placement transition in a sample of 1222 caregiver-patient dyads recruited from 6 US sites. A total of 180 patients were placed in a long-term care facility during the 18-month follow-up period. Data collected before and after placement were analyzed to identify factors associated with placement, the nature of contact between caregivers and their institutionalized relatives after placement, and the relation of both of these factors to health outcomes among dementia caregivers. Main Outcome Measures Caregiver depression (symptoms on the Center for Epidemiological Studies-Depression [CES-D] scale; range, 0-60) and anxiety (State Trait Inventory; range, 10-40) and use of prescription medications for depression and anxiety. Results Caregivers who institutionalized their relative reported depressive symptoms and anxiety to be as high as they were while in-home caregivers. Overall CES-D scores for depression did not change from before to after placement (median [IQR], 15.0 [8-24.5] and 15.0 [7.7-28]; P = .64). Overall anxiety scores on the State Trait Inventory also did not change significantly (median [IQR], 22.0 [19-27] before vs 21.1 [18-27] after; P = .21). These effects were most pronounced among caregivers who were married to the patient (P = .02 for depression), visited more frequently (P = .01 for depression and P<.001 for anxiety), and were less satisfied with the help they received from others (P = .003 for depression and P<.001 for anxiety). The use of antidepressants did not change significantly before (21.1%) t...
- Subjects
PSYCHOLOGY of caregivers; CAREGIVERS; LONG-term health care; CARE of people; LONG-term care facilities; DEMENTIA patients; DEPRESSED persons
- Publication
JAMA: Journal of the American Medical Association, 2004, Vol 292, Issue 8, p961
- ISSN
0098-7484
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1001/jama.292.8.961