Aim and Objective To identify how family caregivers adapt to the caregiving role following a relative's COVID‐19‐related intensive care unit (ICU) hospitalisation. Background Family caregiving is often associated with poor health amongst caregivers which may limit their capacity to effectively support patients. Though severe COVID‐19 infection has necessitated increasing numbers of persons who require caregiver support, little is known about these caregivers, the persons they are caring for, or the strategies used to effectively adjust to the caregiving role. Design A qualitative descriptive study design was adopted, and findings are reported using COREQ. Methods A secondary analysis of transcripts from semi‐structured interviews conducted with recently discharged ICU patients who had COVID‐19 ( n = 16) and their family caregivers ( n = 16) was completed using thematic analysis. MAXQDA 2020 and Miro were used to organise data and complete coding. Analysis involved a structured process of open and closed coding to identify and confirm themes that elucidated adaptation to family caregiving. Results Six themes highlight how family caregivers adapt to the caregiving role following an ICU COVID‐19‐related hospitalisation including (1) engaging the support of family and friends, (2) increased responsibilities to accommodate caregiving, (3) managing emotions, (4) managing infection control, (5) addressing patient independence and (6) engaging support services. These themes were found to be congruent with the Roy adaptation model. Conclusions Family caregiving is a stressful transition following a patient's acute hospitalisation. Effective adaptation requires flexibility and sufficient support, beginning with the care team who can adequately prepare the family for the anticipated challenges of recovery. Relevance to Clinical Practice Clinical teams may improve post‐hospitalisation care outcomes of patients by preparing families to effectively adjust to the caregiver role—particularly in identifying sufficient support resources. Patient or Public Contribution Participation of patients/caregivers in this study was limited to the data provided through participant interviews.
Objectives Poor sleep is common among older adults with chronic health conditions and their spousal caregivers. However, dyadic sleep patterns among spouses are underexplored within the literature. This study examines dyadic sleep characteristics and associated contextual factors among spousal care dyads. Methods Participants included 462 older adult spousal care dyads from the 2015 National Health and Aging Trends Study and National Study of Caregiving (mean ages of care recipients/caregivers = 79 and 76 years, respectively; 22% of dyads were living with dementia). Self-reported sleep included frequency of (a) trouble falling back asleep among dyads, (b) care-related sleep disturbances among caregivers, and (c) trouble initiating sleep among care recipients. Predictors included between-dyad characteristics such as whether respondents had dementia, care burden and support, relationship quality, neighborhood cohesion, and within-dyad characteristics such as demographics, depression, and positive affect. We conducted multilevel dyadic analysis and actor–partner interdependence modeling. Results Sleep was correlated more among dyads living with dementia than those with other chronic conditions. Care dyads had poorer sleep if caregivers reported higher care burden; however, better relationship quality marginally ameliorated the association. Depressive symptoms had a partner effect on poorer sleep among care dyads, whereas positive emotions and older age only had an actor effect on better sleep for care recipients and spousal caregivers. Neighborhood cohesion, care support, and other demographic characteristics were not associated with dyadic sleep outcomes. Discussion Addressing both care recipient- and caregiver-related factors may improve sleep health for both members of the care dyad living with chronic conditions.
IntroductionDementia family caregiving has been linked to depression, anxiety, insomnia, and other negative mental health symptoms, particularly among spousal caregivers who are most likely to have higher levels of caregiving hours. Further, depressive symptoms often present differently based on caregiver race and ethnicity. This study aimed to examine the association between spousal caregiving hours and self‐reported depressive symptoms as well as identify any racial/ethnic disparities in depression self‐reporting.MethodData was drawn from Wave 9 (2008) of the Health and Retirement Study and included 10,120 participants. Linear regression was used to evaluate the relationships between caregiving hours and depression symptoms. Further, a negative binomial model was used to test whether race/ ethnicity moderated the relationship between caregiving hours and self‐reported depressive symptoms.ResultsAs expected, self‐reported depressive symptoms increased as caregiving hours increased (1.65, SD = 2.02, p <0.01). Among the racial and ethnic groups evaluated, Latinx participants experienced the highest levels of depressive symptoms relative to caregiving hours.DiscussionDementia affects families. Care and consideration of the family are as important as the care of the individual affected by a dementia‐related diagnosis. Depression is a serious anticipated mental health outcome linked to dementia family caregiving responsibilities. As such, there is a need for increased culturally responsive professional screening and treatment for depression among family caregivers. Relatedly, primary care providers play an important role in identifying patients serving as family caregivers and offering necessary supports and referrals.
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