The CBT-based telephone intervention increased mental and physical health as well as coping abilities of family caregivers of people with dementia. The intervention can be delivered by qualified CBT therapists after an 8-h training session in existing health care provision structures.
In this article we will describe the evaluation of Antonovsky's 29-items Sense of Coherence Scale (SOC-29) in a large community sample (n = 2.005) of the German population and the development of the Leipzig Short Scale (SOC-L9), which consists of only 9 items. The SOC-29 has a high internal consistency (alpha = 0.92), however, the SOC-subscales (comprehensibility, manageability, meaningfulness) were correlated with each other. A principal component factor analysis did not identify the 3-factor structure of the SOC-Scale. It appears that the best solution consists of one global factor. The newly developed SOC-L9, conceptualized as an unidimensional scale, is a reliable and valid instrument, which allows to assess the SOC economically. In our study the Sense of Coherence depended on age and gender. Women and older people reported a lower SOC. Furthermore we found significant associations between SOC and different subjective health measures. A high SOC was associated with both a lower extent of subjective body complaints and somatoform symptoms and with minor health-related problems in daily living.
Objectives:The study evaluated the efficacy of an internetdelivered cognitive-behavioral intervention for caregivers of people with dementia and examined acceptance of program characteristics.Method: Thirty-nine caregivers (M age = 62.11 ± 9.67, 78.4% female) were enrolled in a 2 × 3 randomized-controlled trial (RCT) that compared an intervention and wait-list control group. A cognitive-behavioral intervention program was adapted for delivery via an internet platform. Participants exchanged eight weekly messages with a therapist.Results: Treatment satisfaction and acceptance of the program were high. Well-being increased over the intervention duration and intervention group participants were better able to cope with the anticipated death of the care recipient and utilized more psychosocial resources after the intervention ended. Effects were not maintained until follow-up and there were no treatment effects for depression and burden of care. Conclusions: Internet-delivered cognitive-behavioral interventions are suitable for caregivers. A larger RCT needs to investigate possible combinations of classic and internetdelivered programs and confirm efficacy. K E Y W O R D S acceptability, caregiving, cognitive-behavioral therapy, dementia, internet interventions, treatment satisfaction J. Clin. Psychol. 2019;75:594-613. wileyonlinelibrary.com/journal/jclp 594 |
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