Being a parent of an adult son or daughter with severe mental illness receiving professional care: parent`s narratives
Pejlert A.
(2001)
The aim of this study was to illuminate the meaning of parental care-giving with reference to having an adult son or daughter with severe mental illness living in a care setting. The parents were asked to narrate their relationship to offspring in the past, in the present, and their thoughts and feelings concerning the future. The study was guided by a phenomenological hermeneutic perspective. The meaning of parental care was illuminated in the themes 'living with sorrow, anguish and constant worry', 'living with guilt and shame', 'relating with carer/care; comfort and hardships' 'coming to terms with difficulties' and 'hoping for a better life for the adult child'. Parental care-giving emerged as a life-long effort. The narratives revealed ongoing grief, sorrow and losses interpreted as chronic sorrow. The narratives disclosed a cultural conflict between the family system and the care system, which was interpreted as a threat to the parental role, but also experiences of receiving comfort and having confidence in the care given. Experiences of stigma were interpreted from the way of labelling illness, narrated experiences of shame and relations with the public and mental health professionals. Parents' persisting in the care-giving role, striving to look after themselves and expressing hopes for the future were interpreted as a process of coming to terms with difficulties. Results suggest that mental health professionals need to be aware of their own attitudes and treatment of families, improve their cooperation with, and support to families, and provide opportunities for family members to meet one another.
Being a parent of an adult son or daughter with severe mental illness receiving professional care: parents’ narratives
Pejlert, Anita
(2001)
The aim of this study was to illuminate the meaning of parental care-giving with reference to having an adult son or daughter with severe mental illness living in a care setting. The parents were asked to narrate their relationship to offspring in the past, in the present, and their thoughts and feelings concerning the future. The study was guided by a phenomenological hermeneutic perspective. The meaning of parental care was illuminated in the themes 'living with sorrow, anguish and constant worry', 'living with guilt and shame', 'relating with carer/care; comfort and hardships''coming to terms with difficulties' and 'hoping for a better life for the adult child'. Parental care-giving emerged as a life-long effort. The narratives revealed ongoing grief, sorrow and losses interpreted as chronic sorrow. The narratives disclosed a cultural conflict between the family system and the care system, which was interpreted as a threat to the parental role, but also experiences of receiving comfort and having confidence in the care given. Experiences of stigma were interpreted from the way of labelling illness, narrated experiences of shame and relations with the public and mental health professionals. Parents' persisting in the care-giving role, striving to look after themselves and expressing hopes for the future were interpreted as a process of coming to terms with difficulties. Results suggest that mental health professionals need to be aware of their own attitudes and treatment of families, improve their cooperation with, and support to families, and provide opportunities for family members to meet one another.
Being a relative of a person with dementia
Almberg, B., & Jansson, W.
(2002)
'Being appropriately unusual': a challenge for nurses in health-promoting conversations with families.
Benzein, E., Hagberg, M., & Saveman, B.
(2008)
This study describes the theoretical assumptions and the application for health-promoting conversations, as a communication tool for nurses when talking to patients and their families. The conversations can be used on a promotional, preventive and healing level when working with family-focused nursing. They are based on a multiverse, salutogenetic, relational and reflecting approach, and acknowledge each person's experience as equally valid, and focus on families' resources, and the relationship between the family and its environment. By posing reflective questions, reflection is made possible for both the family and the nurses. Family members are invited to tell their story, and they can listen to and learn from each other. Nurses are challenged to build a co-creating partnership with families in order to acknowledge them as experts on how to lead their lives and to use their own expert knowledge in order to facilitate new meanings to surface. In this way, family health can be enhanced.
Being appropriately unusual: a challenge for nurses in health-promoting conversations with families.
Benzein, E., Hagberg, M., Saveman. B.
(2008)
Being appropriately unusual: a challenge for nurses in health-promoting conversations with families.
Benzein, E., Hagberg, M., Saveman. B.
(2008)
Being in the light or in the shade: persons with Parkinson's disease and their partners' experience of support
Birgersson, A. M. and A. K. Edberg
(2004)
Interviews with six couples, persons with Parkinson's disease and their partners, were tape-recorded, transcribed and analysed using manifest and latent content analysis. The couples' experiences could be interpreted as Being in the light and Being in the shade of support, with internal variations for the patients and their partners. The narratives also revealed that the disease meant a transition of roles in their relation seen in different patterns: From unity towards unity, From unity towards distance and From distance towards unity. The results indicate that there is a need for more specialised and individually adjusted support.
Being perceived as a 'visitor' in the nursing staff's working arena - the involvement of relatives in daily caring activities in nursing homes in an urban community in Sweden
Holmgren J, Emami A, Eriksson LE, Eriksson H.
(2012)
Background: It is both complex and difficult for relatives when a loved one moves into a nursing home and many relatives are not prepared for the realities these new situations entail. Little attention has been paid to scrutinising the involvement of relatives in patient care, particularly in relation to the structures and routines of nursing homes or to the staff's reasoning concerning their involvement. Aim: To describe, from a gender perspective, how nursing staff's routines and reasoning act to condition the involvement of relatives in nursing homes. Methods: Focused ethnographic fieldwork was conducted in a medium-sized urban community in central Sweden in three different nursing homes. Results: The nursing staff assigns a certain code of conduct to all relatives they perceived as 'visitors' in their working arena. This code of conduct was related to the routines and subcultures existing among the nursing staff and stemmed from a division of labour; the underlying concept of 'visitor' predetermined the potential for relatives' involvement. This involvement is explicitly related to the general gendered characteristics that exist in the nursing staff's perception of the relatives. Discussion: The study's limitations are primarily concerned with shortcomings associated with a research presence during the fieldwork. The discussion focuses on the dimensions of power structures observed in the nursing home routines and the staff's reasoning based on their gendered assumptions. We argue that it is important to develop mechanisms that provide opportunities for nursing staff in elderly care to reflect on these structures without downplaying the excellent care they provide. We stress the importance of further exploring these issues concerning relatives and their involvement in nursing homes to facilitate the transition from informal caregiver to 'visitor'
Bereavement stressors and psychosocial well-being of young adults following the loss of a parent - A cross-sectional survey
Lundberg T., Forinder U., Olsson M., Fürst CJ., Årestedt K., Alvariza A.
(2018)
Abstract
PURPOSE:
The knowledge about young adults who have lost a parent to cancer is limited, and to reach a broader understanding about this group, this study used the Dual Process Model of Coping with Bereavement (Stroebe and Schut, 1999) as a theoretical framework. The purpose of this study was to describe loss- and restoration-oriented bereavement stressors and psychosocial wellbeing of young adultsfollowing the loss of a parent to cancer. METHOD: This survey used baseline data from a longitudinal study. Young adults, aged 16-28 years, who lost a parent to cancer more than two months earlier and agreed to participate in support groups held at three palliative care services in Sweden, responded to a comprehensive theory-based study-specific questionnaire. RESULTS: Altogether, 77 young adults (64 women and 13 men) answered the questionnaire an average of five-to-eight months after the loss. Twenty percent (n = 15) had not been aware of their parent's impending death at all or only knew a few hours before the death, and 65% (n = 50) did not expect the death when it occurred. The young adults reported low self-esteem (n = 58, 76%), mild to severe anxiety (n = 55, 74%), mild to severe depression (n = 23, 31%) and low life satisfaction. CONCLUSION: Young adults reported overall poor psychosocial wellbeing following bereavement. The unexpectedness and unawareness of the parent's imminent death, i.e., loss-oriented bereavement stressors, might influence psychosocial wellbeing. Despite these reports, restoration-oriented stressors, such as support from family and friends, helped them to cope with the loss
Beroende av vård : Innebörden av fenomenet som det visar sig genom patienters, deras anhörigas och vårdares berättelser
Strandberg, G.
(2002)
Berättelser om att vara anhörig till barn och unga med flerfunktionsnedsättning
Anna Pella
(2018)
Sammanfattning
Den här skriften handlar om hur anhöriga till barn och unga med flerfunktionsnedsättning har gjort för att ta vara på livets möjligheter. Du möter Ellen, 8 månader, Elvira, 3 år, Miles, 5 år, Diamanda, 6 år, Hannes, 13 år, Liv, 14 år och Kim, 21 år. Deras anhöriga berättar bland annat om vikten av att träffa andra i liknande situation, att våga skaffa syskon och att ta vara på sig själv som förälder för att förebygga psykisk och fysisk ohälsa. Men de berättar också om barnets behov av att förebygga andningsproblem och att som förälder behöva möta okunskap och fördomar om barnets livskvalitet. Vi får också veta hur de gått till väga för att skapa ett bra liv för hela familjen med hjälp av personlig assistans och särskilt boende.
Foto: Anna Pella
Berättelser om ensamhetens vardag hos människor med psykiska funktionshinder.
Erdner, Anette
(2006)
Best practice in key working: what do research and policy have to say?
Cavet, J.
(2007)
Between 'Choice' and 'Active Citizenship': Competing Agendas for Home Care in the Netherlands
Grootegoed, E.
(2013)
Choice over home care has become an important pillar in the provision of publicly financed long-term care for people of all ages. In many European welfare states, cash-for-care schemes give care recipients greater choice over home care arrangements by allowing them to pay for care provided by acquaintances, friends and even family members. Paying for such informal care, however, is increasingly contested due to growing care needs, rising costs and the perceived need to tighten access to publicly funded care. Citizens in paid care-giving roles are thus pressured to continue their care unpaid or re-divide their care-giving responsibilities with lay 'citizen-carers'. On the basis of a Dutch case study, this article examines how paid family care-givers experience this call for greater self-sufficiency in providing care. An analysis of 25 interviews and 21 letters of complaint revealed that care-givers felt trapped between their desire to derive social status from paid work and their inability to reject or re-divide previously paid care responsibilities. In a society where all citizens are expected to work, care-givers feel that their previously paid care-giving is devalued from a public to a private matter, despite the government's attempts to reframe care as an act of good citizenship.
Between elderly parents and grandchildren : Geographic proximity and trends in four-generation families
Lundholm, E., & Malmberg, G.
(2010)
In an ageing society, families may have an important role in the caretaking and well-being of the elderly. Demographic changes have an impact on the size and structure of families; one aspect is how intergenerational support is distributed when there is a need for support to both older and younger generations at the same time. Another vital aspect of the provision of care for the elderly is geographic proximity. This study is oriented towards the potential "both-end carers" i.e. persons who have grandchildren in potential need of care while still having living ageing parents. The incidence of having grandchildren and having living parents at age 55 and the proximity between generations is described using Swedish register data. The results show that the share of 55-year-olds who are grandparents decreased dramatically from 70% to 35% between 1990 and 2005. As expected, more 55-year-olds have living parents—a proportion that increased from 37% to 47% during this period. As a result of delayed childbearing among the children of these cohorts, the likelihood of belonging to a four-generation family among 55-year-olds has not increased, despite increased longevity. Furthermore, most individuals live within daily reach of their kin and no evidence was found of a trend of increasing geographic distances between generations.
Beyond stroke: Description and evaluation of an effective intervention to support family caregivers of stroke patients.
Schure LM, van den Heuvel ETP, Stewart RE, Sanderman R, de Witte LP, Meyboom-de Jong B.
(2006)
OBJECTIVE:
The objective of this study was to evaluate the strengths and weaknesses of a group support program and a home visiting program for family caregivers of stroke patients. It also examined the best fit between intervention variant and family caregiver and patient characteristics. van den Heuvel's previous effect study showed positive effects of the same intervention program, but unlike our present study differences between the two support variants could not be measured.
METHODS:
Of 257 family caregivers who were included and randomly assigned to an intervention variant or a control group, 127 family caregivers completed the intervention in either the group program or the home visiting program.
RESULTS:
Evaluation data showed that both intervention variants had been helpful and feasible, but home visit participants missed peer contact and follow-up contacts were missed in both intervention programs. In comparison to the home visiting program, the group program participants showed more benefit especially with respect to informational and emotional components. Caregivers' preference for type of intervention revealed that both types of intervention had its supporters. Those that preferred the group program could be clearly characterised: they were burdened, lived with a more psychologically handicapped relative, were using active coping strategies more frequently or lived in a region which is considered to be more sociable.
CONCLUSION:
The present study adds extensively to van den Heuvel's effect study with respect to discriminative aspects of group and home intervention programs and their respective benefits for specific family caregiver groups.
PRACTICE IMPLICATIONS:
In order to suitably match an intervention type with specific caregiver characteristics the intervention provider should utilize caregiver self-selection or undertake professional screening of caregiver burden. Telephone contacts should be offered in addition to the interventions.
Beyond the definition of formal care: Informal care arrangements among older swedes who are not family
Siira, Elin; Rolandsson, Bertil; Wijk, Helle; Wolf, Axel
(2020)
Despite the well‐known associations between local environment and health, few studies have focused on environment and healthcare utilisation, for instance healthcare seeking behaviour or adherence. This study was aimed at analysing housing type, behaviour based on perceived local outdoor safety, social support, informal caregiving, demographics, socioeconomics, and long‐term illness, and associations with health‐seeking and adherence behaviours at a population level. This study used data from the Swedish National Public Health Survey 2004–2014, an annually repeated, large sample, cross‐sectional, population‐based survey study. In all, questionnaires from 100,433 individuals were returned by post, making the response rate 52.9% (100,433/190,000). Descriptive statistics and multiple logistic regressions were used to investigate associations between explanatory variables and the outcomes of refraining from seeking care and non‐adherence behaviour. Living in rented apartment, lodger, a dorm or other was associated with reporting refraining from seeking care (adjusted OR 1.16, 95% CI 1.00–1.22), and non‐adherence (adjusted OR 1.22; 95% CI 1.13–1.31). Refraining from going out due to a perceived unsafe neighbourhood was associated with refraining from seeking care (adjusted OR 1.59, 95% CI 1.51–1.67) and non‐adherence (adjusted OR 1.26, 95% CI 1.17–1.36). Social support and status as an informal caregiver was associated with higher odds of refraining from seeking medical care and non‐adherence. This study suggests that living in rental housing, refraining from going out due to neighbourhood safety concerns, lack of social support or informal caregiver status are associated with lower health‐seeking behaviour and non‐adherence to prescribed medication.
Beyond the definition of formal care: Informal care arrangements among older swedes who are not family
Siira, Elin; Rolandsson, Bertil; Wijk, Helle; Wolf, Axel
(2020)
Abstract
This study explores care practices of older people outside formal care and without appealing to predefined relationships. We conducted interviews with 30 independent‐living men and women aged 67–93 in three municipalities in Sweden. The interviews explored how they cared for themselves and other older people who were not family. Interviews were conducted between December 2017 and May 2018 and later transcribed and analysed using grounded theory. Our paper presents one of the first studies on informal care practices among older people that looks beyond the definition of formal care to understand how such care complements formal care services. The findings show that older people participate in several care arrangements to care for themselves as well as for others. The arrangements feature different types of mutuality and include distant relations to other older people and larger more or less formalised groups. The findings highlight the importance of looking beyond conceptualisations of care based on understandings of formal care and specific relationships as a frame for understanding informal care. To promote older people's health by cultivating and supporting older people's care for themselves and others, research and healthcare practitioners need to explore and acknowledge the significance and complexity of older people's everyday care practices.
Bibliotherapy: An intervention designed for siblings of children with autism [Thesis UMI nr 3457982].
Strobel D.
(2012)
This mixed-method study investigated the use of a bibliotherapy intervention that was designed specifically for preteen siblings of children with autism. Bibliotherapy is a facilitated method in which books related to participants' issues are used in order to help develop their insight about circumstances they share. Approximately one million siblings of children with autism have unique life circumstances that only those with similar lives can understand. Siblings, an intricate part of the dynamic family system, are often excluded from social services that are available to parents and children with autism. Siblings of children with autism can benefit from support, too; however, intervention research that investigates the effectiveness of supporting siblings of children with autism is limited.
The purposes of this study were to measure the effectiveness of a bibliotherapy intervention and to examine whether participants progressed through the three stages of bibliotherapy, increased their knowledge of autism, and whether interactions with their family members changed as a result of engaging in bibliotherapy sessions. Six participants, male and female, attended six bibliotherapy sessions. The book Rules (Lord, 2006) was the catalyst for the sibling discussion and activities that were a part of each bibliotherapy session. Pre and post surveys, sibling comments expressed during the bibliotherapy sessions, and sibling journal entries were used to collect data. The data were then analyzed using the Page Test for Ordered Alternatives and the Wilcoxon Signed-Ranks test (WSR). Results indicated statistically significant outcomes for increasing autism knowledge and nonstatistically significant results for progressing through the three stages of bibliotherapy and changes in family interactions. However, parents reported that the participant siblings demonstrated an increase in understanding and patience for their brothers with autism, and the siblings reported overall satisfaction with the bibliotherapy intervention. Results, implications, and recommendations for future research are provided.
Bildens yta och djup. Grunder för en bildsemiotik
Sonesson, G.
(2001)
Man kan urskilja två ursprung till bildsemiotiken, dels ur försöker att avleda en modell ur studiet av enskilda bilder, som växer fram ur kritiken av Barthes första, enligt allakompetenta bedömare ganska misslyckade försök med utgångspunkt i en reklambild; och dels ur kritiken av Peirces ikonicitetsbegrepp hos Bierman, Lindekens och Eco och av det vardagliga bildbegreppet grundat på likhet hos Goodman, som också bygger påmånga missförstånd. I denna artikel diskuteras i viss mån den första traditionen, men huvuddelen ägnas åt den andra. En ny teori på fenomenologisk grundval angående den speciella form av ikonicitet som förekommer i bilder lägges fram, och denna ikonicitetkontrasteras med andra typer. En allmän indelning i primär och sekundär ikonicitet föreslages.
Brukarinflytandets förändringspotentialer
Steinholz Ekekrantz, Lena
(2005)
Brukarmakt – i teori och praktik
Karlsson, Magnus & Börjeson, Martin
(2011)
Brukarmakt i teori och praktik fördjupar, problematiserar och breddar diskussionen om brukarnas inflytande i människovårdande verksamheter. Utgångspunkten är det socialpsykiatriska området, men boken ger redskap för att förstå brukarmakt i vidare mening inom socialtjänst, vård och omsorg.
Brukarnas makt och delaktighet diskuteras i relation till begrepp som demokrati, medborgarskap och sociala rättigheter, liksom till evidensbaserat socialt arbete. Historiska beskrivningar och teori kompletteras med exempel från praktiken. Även brukarorganisationernas roll analyseras.
Boken är avsedd som kurslitteratur vid utbildningar med inriktning mot vård, omsorg och socialt arbete, men kan också användas av anställda inom offentlig sektor och engagerade i ideella organisationer och föreningar.
Brukarmedverkan i fokus
Andersson, E.-L.
(2005)
Bråd död när patienten drabbats av stroke : vårdares och närståendes upplevelser
Rejnö, Å.
(2012)
A large number of people die from stroke every year, many of them suddenly and unexpectedly as a result of acute stroke. Sudden and unexpected death influences the next of kin and carers as well as the care given to the patients but has not previous been studied within the context of stroke. Aim: The overall aim of the thesis was to describe how carers and next of kin experience patients' death when the patient has been afflicted by stroke. Methods: In the thesis an interpretive qualitative approach has mainly been used. The studies (I-V) have emerged from one another as in a hermeneutic design. An inductive design (I, II, IV, V) and a deductive design (III) have been used. Data were collected with individual interviews (I, III, IV) and individual interviews together with a form (III). Focus group interviews have also been used (II). Participants have been carers on stroke units; ten registered nurses (I) and nineteen respective fifteen members of stroke teams; physicians, registered nurses and enrolled nurses (II, III) together with twelve next of kin to eight patients (IV, V). For analysis of data mainly interpretive methods were utilized; hermeneutic textual interpretation (I), interpretive content analysis (II) and a combined qualitative and quantitative content analysis (III). In addition narrative thematic analysis (IV) and narrative structural analysis (V) were also used. Results: Unexpected sudden death when the patient has been afflicted by stroke can be understood as the unexpected force that intervenes without the patient, the next of kin or the carers being prepared (I). The sudden onset puts the carers in ethically demanding situations through the demands of immediate caring for the patient and also the support the next of kin needs, required by the urgent incident (I - III). The ethical problems became most evident in information, decisions about care and caring, together with support for the next of kin (II). The carers did not use ways of handling ethically problematic situations in the same way as they would have preferred. Mutual trust, both within the teams and with the next of kin constitutes the core for the carers ways of handling the urgent situation and the ethical problems guided by putting what's best for the patients first (III). The studies with the next of kin reveal how complex and elusive the situation might be perceived. The next of kin's experiences of the unexpected sudden death were marked by the uncertainty in the situation and to be left to the mercy of the unexpected (IV). The attention of the next of kin was clearly directed to the patient to the extent that they even forgot themselves and their own needs. The urgency shows itself as influencing the way the next of kin experienced time, how their attention was directed during vigil but it also affected their memory so it behaved in a betraying and contradictory way (IV). Conclusion: Through the results death caused by acute stroke emerge as unexpected sudden death. Unexpected sudden death shows as death calling for urgent actions, brings a potential power to violate the dignity of the afflicted, creating ethical problems that the carers have to deal with and have the power to completely invade the next of kin's present life. The unexpected sudden death brings with it an element of uncertainty that all involved in the situation, the patient, their next of kin and the carers have to address themselves to. Bereavement counselling could be a way to support the next of kin. The methods of this thesis have given knowledge of narrative structure and how it can be utilized to develop stories could be used as a tool for caregivers support the next of kin. Keywords: carers, combined qualitative and quantitative content analysis, content analysis, dignity, hermeneutic textual analysis, narratives, next of kin, qualitative methods, sudden and unexpected death, uncertainty, stroke, stroke team
Bröderna Lejonhjärta, Bok från 6år
Astrid Lindgren. Bilder Ilon Wikland
(1973)
Nangijala, där det ännu är lägereldarna och sagornas tid, det är dit man kommer när man dör. Det berättar Jonatan för sin bror Skorpan som ligger hemma i köket och hostar och är rädd för att dö. Men Jonatan säger att han inte behöver vara rädd, för de kommer att ses i Nangijala. Astrid Lindgrens saga om bröderna Lejonhjärta är en klassisk berättelse om liv och död, syskonkärlek och mod. Kapitelbok från 6 år.
Buller om huller i Mamma Grå
Hedberg, Jessica
(2018)
Sammanfattning
Mamma är sig inte lik. Hon fräser, blir lätt arg och är alltid trött. Hon har blivit sjuk och behöver vila. Det är liksom huller om buller i huvudet på henne. I berättelsen får vi följa barnen Maxi och Lilla Lo som försöker förhålla sig till sin mammas mående. Är det deras fel att mamma är sjuk? Ska klumpen i magen någonsin försvinna? Det här är en berättelse som börjar i grått, men hur slutar det?
Burden and health in relatives of persons with severe mental illness: a Norwegian cross-sectional study
Weimand, B., Hedelin, B., Sällström, C., & Hall-Lord, M.
(2010)
Burden in Schizophrenia Caregivers: Impact on Family Psychoeducation and Awerness of Patient Suicidality
McDonnell, G. Michael, Short, A. Robert, Berry, M. Christopher & Dyck, G. Dennis
(2003)
Family caregivers of persons with schizophrenia and other psychotic disorders experience high levels of burden. Although a number of patient and caregiver predictors of burden have been identified, little research has investigated the contributions of patient depression, suicidal ideation, and substance abuse. In addition, family psychoeducation interventions have reduced patient symptoms, as well as inpatient treatment utilization; however, it is not known whether or not these interventions reduce family burden. This study- investigated predictors of family burden and tested to what degree multiple family group treatment (MFGT), relative to a standard-care condition, was associated with reduced family burden. Participants were 90 outpatients with a diagnosis of schizophrenia or other psychotic disorders, and their caregivers who were enrolled in a 2 year psychoeducation intervention. The best set of predictors of burden, identified by stepwise linear regression, was young patient age, awareness of patient's suicidal ideation, and family resources. These variables accounted for 32% of the total variance in burden. Findings suggest that caregiver's awareness of patient's suicidal ideation; not patient's report of suicidal ideation; and that patient age not duration of the illness, were significant, independent predictors of burden. When compared to a standard-care condition over 2 years, MFGT did not reduce family caregiver burden. Discussions focus on the relationship between burden and its predictors, and possible reasons why MFGT did not decrease burden. Modifications are proposed that may increase the impact of MFGT.
Burden of Caregivers of Patients With Bipolar Affective disorders
Bauer, R., Gottfriedsen, G.-U., Binder, H., Dobmeier, M., Cording, C., Hajak, G., & Spiessl, H.
(2012)
Thirty-two problem-oriented interviews with caregivers of patients with bipolar affective disorders were analyzed using content analysis. The 722 statements of caregivers about their experiences of subjective burden because of the illness of their family members were summarized in 49 global statements and correlated by factor analysis to 10 types of burden. In particular, patients' noncompliance as well as the helplessness of the caregivers in interaction with the (changing) depressive and manic symptoms of the ill family members emerged as serious burdens on the caregivers. Whereas female caregivers suffered more from problems regarding quality of relationship with the patient, male caregivers experienced more constraints on their own autonomy, uncertainty concerning their judgment of patients' capacity, and uncertainty because of the changing symptoms of illness. The findings of this study highlight that an appreciation of caregivers' own consternation and information about how best to handle the (uncooperative) behavior of the patient should be taken into account in psychoeducational groups as well as in the daily work routine of professionals.
Burden of informal care giving to patients with psychoses: a descriptive and methodological study
Flyckt L, Löthman A, Jörgensen L, Rylander A, Koernig T.
(2013)
Background:
There is a lack of studies of the size of burden associated with informal care giving in psychosis.
Aims:
To evaluate the objective and subjective burden of informal care giving to patients with psychoses, and to compare a diary and recall method for assessments of objective burden.
Method:
Patients and their informal caregivers were recruited from nine Swedish psychiatric outpatient centres. Subjective burden was assessed at inclusion using the CarerQoL and COPE index scales. The objective burden (time and money spent) was assessed by the caregivers daily using diaries over four weeks and by recall at the end of weeks 1 and 2.
Results:
One-hundred and seven patients (53% females; mean age 43 ± 11) and 118 informal caregivers (67%; 58 ± 15 years) were recruited. Informal caregivers spent 22.5 hours/week and about 14% of their gross income on care-related activities. The time spent was underestimated by two to 20 hours when assessed by recall than by daily diary records. The most prominent aspects of the subjective burden were mental problems.
Conclusion:
Despite a substantial amount of time and money spent on care giving, the informal caregivers perceived the mental aspects of burden as the most troublesome. The informal caregiver burden is considerable and should be taken into account when evaluating effects of health care provided to patients with psychoses.
Keywords: Informal care giving, schizophrenia, subjective burden, objective burden, diary method, recall method
Burdens and difficulties experienced by caregivers of children and adolescents with schizophrenia‐spectrum disorders: A qualitative study
Knock J, Kline E, Schiffman J, Maynard A, Reeves G.
(2011)
Aim: The purpose of this qualitative study was to investigate the burdens and difficulties associated with the experience of caring for youth with schizophrenia-spectrum disorders. Methods: Ten caregivers participated in a modified version of the Knowledge about Schizophrenia Illness interview. Results: The most common areas of general difficulties reported by caregivers were emotional burdens and the everyday practical demands and sacrifices required in caring for their dependents. Results also suggested high levels of burden for caregivers concerning difficulties with mental health services. Conclusion: Additional work is needed to learn more about the challenges that caregivers of youth with schizophrenia-spectrum disorders are facing, as well as to develop empirically based strategies for helping these caregivers and their dependents.
Burdens and difficulties experienced by caregivers of children and adolescents with schizophrenia‐spectrum disorders: A qualitative study
Knock J, Kline E, Schiffman J, Maynard A, Reeves G.
(2011)
Aim: The purpose of this qualitative study was to investigate the burdens and difficulties associated with the experience of caring for youth with schizophrenia-spectrum disorders.
Methods: Ten caregivers participated in a modified version of the Knowledge about Schizophrenia Illness interview.
Results: The most common areas of general difficulties reported by caregivers were emotional burdens and the everyday practical demands and sacrifices required in caring for their dependents. Results also suggested high levels of burden for caregivers concerning difficulties with mental health services.
Conclusion: Additional work is needed to learn more about the challenges that caregivers of youth with schizophrenia-spectrum disorders are facing, as well as to develop empirically based strategies for helping these caregivers and their dependents.
By their own young hands: Delibirate self-harm and suicid ideas.
Hawton K, Rodham K, Evans E.
(2006)
Self-harm in adolescents is an increasingly recognized problem, and there is growing awareness of the important role schools and health services can play in detecting and supporting those at risk. By Their Own Young Hand explores the findings of the first large-scale survey of deliberate self-harm and suicidal thinking in adolescents in the UK, and draws out the implications for prevention strategies and mental health promotion.
Six thousand young people were asked about their experiences of self-harm, the coping methods they use, and their attitudes to the help and support available. The authors identify the risk and protective factors for self-harm, exploring why some adolescents with suicidal thoughts go on to harm themselves while others do not, what motivates some young people to seek help, and whether distressed teenagers feel they receive the support they need. By Their Own Young Hand offers practical advice on how schools can detect young people at risk, cope with the aftermath of self-harm or attempted suicide, and develop training programmes for teachers. It also examines the roles of self-help, telephone helplines, email counselling, and walk-in crisis centres.
Packed with adolescents' own personal accounts and perspectives, this accessible overview will be essential reading for teachers, social workers and mental health professionals.
Bygga och använda språk : Bliss i AKK
Heister Trygg, Boel
(2009)
Boken presenterar blissanvändare i olika åldrar och på olika språkliga nivåer. Den vill ge inspiration att prova blisspråket också där det inte är alldeles givet. Författaren försöker bland annat att ge svar på frågor som: Varför bliss? Hur ser blisspråket ut? Hur väljer man symboler och bygger upp en blisstavla?
Bästa i främsta rummet. FN:s konvention om barnets rättigheter i Sverige
SOU
(1998)
Can I tell you about Bipolar Disorder? A Guide for Friends, Family and Professionals
Mainstone-Cotton Sonia
(2018)
Läsålder
6-9 år
Illustratör/Fotograf Jon Birch
If a grownup you love has bipolar disorder, what does that mean? In this friendly guide, 11-year-old Josh tells all about his dad's bipolar, including what mental illness is, and how it can affect patients and their families. The guide explains in child-friendly terms how different types of bipolar affect people's feelings and behaviour. It is a comforting book that prepares young readers for the hard parts of knowing someone with bipolar, while communicating that bipolar is nothing to be afraid or ashamed of. Providing an excellent starting point for discussion both at home and in the classroom, it also includes a helpful list of recommended sources for additional support.
Can rehabilitation in the home setting reduce the burden of care for the next-of-kin of stroke victims?
Björkdahl A, Nilsson AL, Sunnerhagen KS.
(2007)
BACKGROUND:
More evidence of the efficacy of caregiver interventions is needed. The aim of this study was to evaluate whether counselling in the home setting reduces the caregiver burden.
METHODS:
Thirty-six patients after stroke, median age 53 years, with a close family member, were selected for an evaluation of the burden of care and 35 participated. They were part of a randomized controlled trial, comparing rehabilitation in the home setting with outpatient rehabilitation. In the home setting, counselling about the stroke and its consequences was included. Assessments with the Caregiver Burden scale were made at 3 weeks, 3 months and one year after discharge.
RESULTS:
The burden of the 2 groups did not differ. After the intervention, there was a tendency to a lower burden for the home setting. The burden for the home setting was then unchanged from 3 weeks to 1 year, while outpatient rehabilitation showed a reduced burden over time. For the home setting, significant correlations to activity level were seen after the intervention.
CONCLUSION:
A positive effect of counselling was seen, as the home setting burden tends to be lower after the intervention, while outpatient rehabilitation seems to adjust with time. The results suggest that counselling reduces burden and the remaining burden is associated with the patient's ability.
Cancer, a relational disease: exploring the needs of relatives to cancer patients
Sandén Ulrika, Nilsson Fredrik, Thulesius Hans, Hägglund Maria, Harrysson Lars
(2019)
Abstract [en]
Purpose: In this qualitative interview study we investigated the experiences of family members to cancer patients. Our objective was to explore and to differentiate their needs from the needs of cancer patients.
Methods: Five focus groups and six individual narrative interviews with 17 family members to cancer patients in Sweden were conducted and compared with 19 cancer patient interviews. Our analysis was inspired by classic grounded theory.
Results: Family members to cancer patients expressed own morbidity connected to high stress levels and difficulties in recognizing own stress due to ongoing comparisons with the cancer patient. Family members were trapped in a momentary terror-like situation where they became their sick relative's safety net. A percieved inability to improve their loved one's well being contributed to a feeling of guilt. The longing for it all to end was encumbered with shame since the end included possible death.
Conclusions: By recognizing cancer as a disease striking both body and relationships, family members are given precedence over their own struggles, differentiated from the patient's experiences. We define differences in needs between cancer patients and family members. Family members to cancer patients may be supported in developing balancing strategies towards less stress, increased safety and moments of contentment.
Care allowances for the frail elderly and their impact on women care-givers
Jacobzone, S. and J. Jensen
(2000)
Care allowances for the frail elderly and their impact on women care-givers.
Jacobzone, S., Jensen, J.
(2000)
Care as a good for social policy
Daly, M.
(2002)
Care as employment and welfare provision - child care and elder care in Sweden at the dawn of the 21st century.
Szebehely, M.
(2005)
Care coordination: integrating health and related systems of care for children with special health care needs
Committee on Children With Disabilities
(1999)
Care coordination is a process that links children with special health care needs and their families to services and resources in a coordinated effort to maximize the potential of the children and provide them with optimal health care. Care coordination often is complicated because there is no single entry point to multiple systems of care, and complex criteria determine the availability of funding and services among public and private payers. Economic and sociocultural barriers to coordination of care exist and affect families and health care professionals. In their important role of providing a medical home for all children, primary care pediatricians have a vital role in the process of care coordination, in concert with the family.
According to the Maternal and Child Health Bureau (MCHB) definition, which was later adopted by the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP), "children with special health care needs are those who have or are at increased risk for chronic physical, developmental, behavioral, or emotional conditions and who require health and related services of a type or amount beyond that required by children generally."1 Primary care pediatricians and other professionals caring for children with special health care needs generally acknowledge the importance of and the need for coordination of care. New initiatives from health care reform and managed care are reshaping the traditional direct clinical care role of the primary care pediatrician to include gatekeeper and coordination roles. This transition to managed systems of care from traditional fee-for-service care has important implications for aspects of care coordination. The primary care pediatrician may be required to assume even greater responsibility for providing care coordination for their patients under capitated arrangements. This policy statement reviews the importance of the primary care pediatrician's role in care coordination in the context of the medical home.
Care management and care provision for older relatives amongst employed informal care-givers
Rosenthal C, Martin-Matthews A, Keefe J.
(2007)
Care management among informal caregivers includes care-related discussions with other family members or the care recipient about the arrangements for formal services and financial matters, doing relevant paperwork, and seeking information. The study examines the prevalence of this type of care , the circumstances under which it occurs, its variations by caregiver characteristics and its impact on the carers, using a sub-sample of 1847 full-time employed individuals who were assisting older relatives drawn from the Canadian 'Work and Family Survey'. The analysis shows that managerial care is common, distinct from other types of care, and that most care-givers provide both managerial and direct care. Care management includes both the orchestration of care and financial and bureaucratic management. Providing managerial care generates stress amongst women and interferes with work amongst men.
Care Management's Challenges and Opportunities to Reduce the Rapid Rehospitalization of Frail Community-Dwelling Older Adults
Golden AG, Tewary S, Dang S, Roos BA.
(2010)
Community-based frail older adults, burdened with complex medical and social needs, are at great risk for preventable rapid rehospitalizations. Although federal and state regulations are in place to address the care transitions between the hospital and nursing home, no such guidelines exist for the much larger population of community-dwelling frail older adults. Few studies have looked at interventions to prevent rehospitalizations in this large segment of the older adult population. Similarly, standardized disease management approaches that lower hospitalization rates in an independent adult population may not suffice for guiding the care of frail persons. Care management interventions currently face unique challenges in their attempt to improve the transitional care of community-dwelling older adults. However, impending national imperatives aimed at reducing potentially avoidable hospitalizations will soon demand and reward care management strategies that identify frail persons early in the discharge process and promote the sharing of critical information among patients, caregivers, and health care professionals. Opportunities to improve the quality and efficiency of care-related communications must focus on the effective blending of training and technology for improving communications vital to successful care transitions.
Care revolutions in the making? A comparison of cash-for-care programmes in four european countries
Timonen, V., Convery, J., & Cahill, S.
(2006)
Care robot orientation: What, who and how? Potential users’ perceptions
Johansson-Pajala, Rose-Marie ; Thommes, Kirsten ; Hoppe, Julia A ; Tuisku, Outi ; Hennala, Lea ; Pekkarinen, Satu ; Melkas, Helinä ; Gustafsson, Christine
(2020)
Abstract:
Exploring the specific field of care robot orientation generates many questions regarding the meaning, content and how it should be conducted. The issue is important due to the general digitalisation and implementation of welfare technology and care robots. The aim of the study was to explore perceptions of care robot orientation from the potential users' perspective. Data were collected by focus group interviews in Finland, Germany and Sweden. In all three countries, potential user groups were represented: older adults, relatives, professional caregivers and care service managers. A qualitative descriptive method was used for analysing data. The data revealed three aspects of care robot orientation: (1) What care robot orientation is, (2) Who needs it and by Whom it should be given and (3) How it should be performed. The need for care robot orientation is general in society. In the absence of knowledge about care robots, it is nearly impossible to know what to ask for or actually seek information about. Therefore, care robot orientation must be founded on agile implementation planning for care robots, with a firm basis in trustworthy knowledge and information and respecting individuals' wishes. This also gives rise to an ethical challenge when care robots are offered to people having reduced decision-making ability (dementia, cognitive impairment), along with the issue of who then should make the decision. The mapping of the What, Who/Whom and How aspects of care robot orientation offers a foundation for the creation of orientation models, which might facilitate structured and goal-oriented care robot orientation strategies.
Care trajectories in the oldest old. Diss.
Ernsth, Bravell, M.
(2007)
This thesis demonstrates relations among health, social network, ADL and patterns of care in the oldest old guided by a resource theoretical model.The analyzed data are based on two studies: the Nona study, a longitudinal study of 157 individuals aged 86 to 94 years, and the H70 study, a longitudinal study of 964 individuals aged 70 at baseline. Data were collected by interviews and to some extent in the H70 study, medical exams and medical records.The results demonstrate that perceived resources seem to affect patterns of care to a higher extent than the more objective resources in the sample of the oldest old. On the other hand, sociodemographic variables such as gender, marital status and SES, in addition to the more objective resources of having children nearby and the number of symptoms of illness predicted institutionalization during a subsequent 30-year period from the age of 70. The proportion of elderly persons' institutionalization was further significantly higher than that generally found in cross-sectional studies. ADL was one of the strongest predictors for both use of formal care and institutionalization in both samples, indicating an effective targeting of the formal care system in Sweden. The care at end of life in the oldest old is challenged by the problems with progressive declines in ADL and health, which makes it hard to fit in the dying oldest old in the palliative care system. There is a need to increase the knowledge and the possibility for care staff to support and encourage social network factors and for decision-making staff to consider factors beyond ADL.
Caregiver -- Who Copes How?
Chappell, N. L., & Dujela, C.
(2009)
Within gerontological caregiving research, there is a major emphasis on stresses and burdens of this role. Yet there has been little attention directed toward the coping strategies that caregivers engage in to cope with this role and the factors that influence their adoption of different coping strategies. This article examines coping strategies and change in coping strategy over a 1-year period. In particular the differential importance of caregiver capacity (such as social support, health, and personality) compared with careload (such as hours of caregiving and need of the care recipient) is examined within a path model. Data came from a purposive sample of caregivers experiencing heavy demands. Overall, problem-focused coping is used more often than emotion-focused coping (either positive or negative) or seeking social support, but caregivers use all types simultaneously. Caregiver capacity, specifically neuroticism, is the strongest predictor of problem-focused coping with those high in neuroticism less likely to use this strategy. High neuroticism also predicts less use overall and negative emotion-focused coping strategies. Few significant predictors emerge of change; those that did were caregiver capacity, not careload variables. The use of all coping strategies, except seeking social support which remained stable, decreased over a 1-year period.
Caregiver Assessment
Feinberg, L. F.
(2008)
Caregiver burden among three-generation immigrant families in Israel
Slonim-Nevo V, Cwikel J, Luski H, Lankry M, Shraga Y.
(1995)
Caregiver burden and coping in schizophrenia and bipolar disorder: A qualitative study
Ganguly, K. K., R. K. Chadda, et al.
(2010)
Caregivers of people with severe mental disorders suffer from having a considerable burden as a result of their caregiving role. They develop different kinds of coping strategies to deal with this burden. There has been a lack of qualitative studies on caregiver burden and coping, especially from non-Western populations. The present paper reports findings of a longitudinal study of burden and coping in a group of caregivers of people suffering from schizophrenia and bipolar affective disorder (BAD). Qualitative assessments were done by focus group discussions (FGDs) with the caregivers over a period of about a year. Caregivers reported burden in different areas including effects on family functioning, social isolation, financial problems, and health. They used multiple coping strategies including developing compassion in caregiving, hoping for a better future, developing faith in God, participating in religious practices, and helping others with a similar problem.
Caregiver burden and coping: A prospective study of relationship between burden and coping in caregivers of patients with schizophrenia and bipolar affective disorder
Chadda, R. K., T. B. Singh, et al.
(2007)
Introduction: Caregivers of patients of schizophrenia and bipolar affective disorder (BAD) experience considerable burden while caring their patients. They develop different coping strategies to deal with this burden. Longitudinal studies are required to assess the relationship between caregiver burden and coping. Aim: The present study was conducted to assess relationship between burden and coping in caregivers of clinically stable patients with schizophrenia and BAD. Method: One hundred patients each of schizophrenia and BAD attending a psychiatric outpatient setting and their caregivers were followed up for a period of 6 months. Burden and coping strategies were assessed in the caregivers at baseline, and after 3 and 6 months using the Burden Assessment Schedule (BAS) and Ways of Coping Checklist--Hindi Adaptation (WCC--HA). Results: Burden remained stable over 6 months and was comparable in the two groups of caregivers. Caregivers from both the groups were found to use problem focused coping strategies more often than seek social support and avoidance strategies. Scores on avoidance type of coping showed a positive correlation with the total burden scores and a number of burden factors. Conclusions: Caregivers of patients of schizophrenia and BAD face similar levels of burden and use similar types of coping methods to deal with it. Relationship between caregiver burden and coping is quite complex.
Caregiver burden as a short-term predictor of weight loss in older outpatients suffering from mild to moderate Alzheimer's disease: a three months follow-up study
Bilotta, C., Bergamaschini, L., Arienti, R., Spreafico, S., & Vergani, C.
(2010)
Abstract
OBJECTIVE:
To determine if caregiver burden (CB) can be an independent predictive factor of weight loss at three months in older outpatients suffering from mild to moderate Alzheimer's disease (AD) and living at home.
METHOD:
Prospective cohort study involving 105 subjects aged 70 years or more, affected by mild to moderate AD and living at home with the assistance of at least one informal caregiver, who consecutively underwent a multidimensional geriatric assessment. Body weight was re-evaluated at a three month follow-up, from December 2008 to April 2009. Those who experienced a weight loss greater than 3% of the baseline weight constituted the 'weight loss' group.
RESULTS:
Out of the 97 older participants attending follow-up, 22 (23%) had experienced a weight loss > 3%. At a multivariate logistic regression analysis, a greater CB at baseline, defined by a score of the caregiver burden inventory scale in the highest tertile (i.e. 36+ out of 96), turned out to predict weight loss at three months (odds ratio (OR) 13.93, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.91-101.33, p = 0.009), independently of other factors associated with the 'weight loss' group such as age, functional dependence and the risk of malnutrition estimated by means of the Mini Nutritional Assessment Short Form (MNA-SF).
CONCLUSION:
For older outpatients affected by mild to moderate AD and living at home, CB constitutes a risk factor for weight loss even in the short-term, independently of other factors such as the risk of malnutrition assessed by means of the MNA-SF.
Caregiver Confidence: Does It Predict Changes in Disability Among Elderly Home Care Recipients?
Li, L. W. and S. J. McLaughlin
(2012)
PURPOSE OF THE STUDY: The primary aim of this investigation was to determine whether caregiver confidence in their care recipients' functional capabilities predicts changes in the performance of activities of daily living (ADL) among elderly home care recipients. A secondary aim was to explore how caregiver confidence and care recipient functional self-efficacy jointly influence changes in ADL performance over time. DESIGN AND METHODS: The sample included 5,138 elderly recipients of home and community-based long-term care in Michigan. ADL performance was assessed multiple times over a 2-year period. Caregiver confidence was measured at baseline with a single item. Multilevel modeling was used to estimate the effect of caregiver confidence on changes in ADL performance over time, controlling for baseline self-efficacy, ADL performance, and other factors that might confound the relationship. Based on caregiver confidence and elder self-efficacy, we created 4 groups of elder caregiver dyads to explore the combined effect of caregiver and elder confidence on change in ADL performance. RESULTS: Elders whose caregivers were confident in their capacity for greater functional independence experienced greater improvement in ADL performance than those whose caregivers were not confident. Elders in dyads in which both members expressed confidence experienced more improvement in ADL performance than those in dyads in which either one or both members lacked confidence. IMPLICATIONS: Interventions to strengthen caregivers' confidence in their care recipients' functional capabilities may slow functional losses among home care elders. Additional research is needed to confirm these findings and identify the factors that influence caregiver confidence.
Caregiver credits in France, Germany, and Sweden: Lessons for the United States
Jankowski, J.
(2011)
Recently, analysts in the United States (US) have proposed adopting caregiver credits, or pension credits, provided to individuals for time spent out of the workforce while caring for dependent children and sick or elderly relatives. The primary objective of these credits, used in almost all public pension systems in the European Union, is to improve the adequacy of old-age benefits for women whose gaps in workforce participation typically lead to fewer years of contributions, lower lifetime average earnings, and consequently lower pensions. This article examines caregiver credits in the context of future reforms to the US Social Security system, with attention given to the adequacy of current spouse and survivor benefits and how changing marital patterns and family structures have increased the risk of old-age poverty among certain groups of women. It then analyzes caregiver credit programs in selected countries, with particular focus on design, administration, and cost.
Caregiver Participation in Hospice Interdisciplinary Team Meetings via Videophone Technology: A Pilot Study to Improve Pain Management
Parker Oliver, D., Demiris, G., Wittenberg-Lyles, E., Porock, D., Collier, J., & Arthur, A.
(2010)
Abstract
This article discusses a pilot study testing a videophone intervention enabling hospice patients and caregivers to remotely participate in interdisciplinary team meetings, with the goal of improving pain management. The aim of this study was to test potential outcome measures and combine the data with qualitative observations to assess the overall feasibility and promise of the intervention. The outcomes evaluated included hospice patient quality of life, caregiver perceptions of pain medications, caregiver quality of life, and caregiver anxiety related to team participation. The pilot study showed that caregiver participation in the care planning process is feasible and may change caregiver perceptions of pain medication, potentially improving pain management for hospice patients.
Caregiver Participation in Hospice Interdisciplinary Team Meetings via Videophone Technology: A Pilot Study to Improve Pain Management
Parker Oliver, D., Demiris, G., Wittenberg-Lyles, E., Porock, D., Collier, J., & Arthur, A.
(2010)
Abstract
This article discusses a pilot study testing a videophone intervention enabling hospice patients and caregivers to remotely participate in interdisciplinary team meetings, with the goal of improving pain management. The aim of this study was to test potential outcome measures and combine the data with qualitative observations to assess the overall feasibility and promise of the intervention. The outcomes evaluated included hospice patient quality of life, caregiver perceptions of pain medications, caregiver quality of life, and caregiver anxiety related to team participation. The pilot study showed that caregiver participation in the care planning process is feasible and may change caregiver perceptions of pain medication, potentially improving pain management for hospice patients.
Caregiver responsiveness to the Family Bereavement Program: what predicts responsiveness? What does responsiveness predict?
Schoenfelder, E.N., Sandler, I.N., Millsap, R.E., Wolchik, C.B., Berkel, C., & Ayers, T.S.
(2013)
Abstract
The study developed a multidimensional measure to assess participant responsiveness to a preventive intervention and applied this measure to study how participant baseline characteristics predict responsiveness and how responsiveness predicts program outcomes. The study was conducted with caregivers who participated in the parenting-focused component of the Family Bereavement Program (FBP), a prevention program for families that have experienced parental death. The sample consisted of 89 caregivers assigned to the intervention condition in the efficacy trial of the FBP. Positive parenting, caregiver depression, and child externalizing problems at baseline were found to predict caregivers' use of program skills outside the group, and more child internalizing problems predicted more positive perceptions of the group environment. Higher levels of skill use during the program predicted increased positive parenting at the 11-month follow-up, whereas positive perceptions of the group environment predicted decreased caregiver depressive symptoms at follow-up. Caregiver skill use mediated the relation between baseline positive parenting and improvements in positive parenting at 11-month follow-up, and skill use and perceived group environment mediated changes in caregiver depression from baseline to 11-month follow-up.
Caregiver strain in Parkinson's disease and the impact of disease duration
Lökk ,J.
(2008)
Abstract
AIM:
The task of managing care for patients with Parkinson's disease (PD) often falls upon a family member taking on the role as a caregiver (CG) implying a burden on these CGs. The aim of this study was to evaluate CG strain of PD patients with regarding different psychosocial domains and the influence of PD/CG duration of PD.
METHODS:
A cross-sectional telephone interview survey of 451 CGs randomly selected from the registry of the Swedish Parkinson's Disease Association. A structured questionnaire covering sociodemographic, psychosocial, and general CG factors, sleep and depression of the CG as well as issues of the patient's disease was used by 4 independent interviewers blinded to the study objective.
RESULTS:
Four hundred and four of 451 (90%) CGs responded with a mean age of 68.5 years with 62% females. The results were stratified in 3 groups with regard to disease duration of the PD patient, 0-4, 5-10, and >11 years, respectively. General health condition of the CGs was regarded satisfactory independent of disease duration. Insufficient sleep and disease related stress were considered to be prominent in 36% and 61%, respectively, being significantly more prominent in the group with the longest disease duration. Decreased mood was reported in 31% with no difference between groups. More than 30% of CGs also experienced daily problems with tiredness and sleep disturbance; 27% hypertension; 17% muscle strain, headache and fatigue; and 14% gastro-intestinal problems most items regardless of disease duration. The most troublesome symptoms of the patients to the CGs were reported to be the motor dysfunction (58%). More than half experienced little or no understanding of their situation.
CONCLUSION:
CGs are afflicted with strain and burden in many psychosocial and somatic domains despite satisfactory general wellbeing independent of disease duration. The longer disease duration, and, accordingly CG duration, the more impact on certain domains of CG burden, however, with little understanding of their situation. These findings should be given greater consideration when organizing and planning for PD care in the health care system and the community.
Caregivers and Community Service Non-Use in Australia
Hill, P., Fisher, K., Thomson, C., Bittman, M.
(2007)
Caregivers dealing with stroke pull together and feel connected
Pierce LL, Steiner V, Govoni AL, Hicks B, Thompson TL, Friedemann ML.
(2004)
Changes that can accompany stroke may create considerable stress for individuals caring for the affected person. This study explored the coping process for nine rural-dwelling caregivers of persons with stroke and the responses of these caregivers to a Web-based support program. The qualitative data management program QSR N 5 was used to analyze quotes from telephone interviews and computer entries. Stories of how caregivers came together and supported one another emerged from the data collected as part of a larger study that examined the experience of caring. Friedemann's framework of systemic organization guided data analysis and interpretation. Actions demonstrated by the caregivers illustrated the process of crisis resolution through family togetherness in which nurses were included. The findings of this study aided in understanding this process and gave direction for nurses working with such clients.
Caregivers of relatives with dementia: Experiences encompassing social support and bereavement
Almberg, B. E., Grafström, M., & Winblad, B.
(2000)
Caregivers of relatives with dementia: experiences encompassing social support and bereavement
Almberg BE, Grafström M, Winblad B.
(2000)
Caregivers who suffer grief after the death of a family member with dementia have received little attention in research. In this Swedish study, 30 caregivers were interviewed less than 6 months after the death of a family member with dementia. The study explored the caregivers' experiences of bereavement and social support in two stages: during the caregiving period and following death, and examined any links between the two stages. Findings showed that a central dynamic in caregiver bereavement seemed to be the support experienced, as well as the possibility of having continued support from family and/or friends. Caregivers who reported more positive appraisals during the caregiver period were likely to feel relieved after the death of a relative. They also tended to be more satisfied with their social support. (AKM).
Caregivers´ experiences of caring for an elderly next of kin in Sweden
Wester, A., Larsson, L., & Pennbrant, S.
(2013)
Background: Care of elderly changed in the 1990s in Sweden; treatment sessions were shortened in particular. Consequently, patients have a greater need for care when returning home from hospital. This task may seem overwhelming and caregivers can feel lonely, worn out and resigned in their situation.
Aim: Explore how caregivers experience caring for an elderly next of kin in ordinary living.
Method: Qualitative content analysis of semi-structured interviews with eleven Swedish caregivers.
Findings: Caregivers experienced their situation as something to be endured. In particular, they felt a need for belonging, a need for controlling everyday life, and a need for support.
Conclusion: Home care nurses, health centres and home support workers should be aware of and respect caregivers' needs in terms of support.
Caregiving - predicting at-risk status
Chappell, N. L. & Dujela, C.
(2008)
Caregiving and cognitive function in older women
Bertrand, R. M., Saczynski, J. S., Mezzacappa, C., Hulse, M., Ensrud, K., & Fredman, L.
(2012)
Objectives: Recent findings of better health outcomes in older caregivers than noncaregivers suggest a healthy caregiver hypothesis (HCH) model may be more appropriate than the stress process model for evaluating the health effects of caregiving. In a cross-sectional study, we tested the HCH on two cognitive domains: verbal memory and processing speed. Method: Participants from the Caregiver Study of Osteoporotic Fractures who had a 2-year follow-up interview were categorized as continuous caregivers (n = 194), former caregivers (n = 148), or continuous noncaregivers (n = 574). The Hopkins Verbal Learning Test (HVLT; memory) and Digit Symbol Substitution Task (DSST; processing speed) were administered at the follow-up interview. Results: Continuous caregivers had better memory performance and processing speed than continuous noncaregivers: adjusted mean scores for HVLT were 18.38 versus 15.80 (p < .0001), and for DSST were 35.91 versus 34.38 (p = .09). Discussion: Results support the HCH model for cognitive outcomes in older women caregivers; however, the relationship may be domain specific.
Caregiving and volunteering among older people in Sweden - prevalences and profiles
Jegermalm, M., & Jeppsson Grassman, E.
(2009)
Caregiving and volunteering among older people in Sweden - prevalences and profiles
Jegermalm, M., & Jeppsson Grassman, E.
(2009)
This study examines the role of older people in Swedish society by exploring the prevalence of their informal caregiving and volunteering and by analyzing the profiles of these contributors of unpaid work. Data were collected by means of telephone interviews in a Swedish representative survey conducted in 2005. Our analysis reveals three distinct profiles of people involved in unpaid activities. One of these consists of those involved both in informal help giving and volunteering, a group that has been labeled "super helpers" or "doers" in earlier research. It is important for social policy planners to recognize these groups of older people and better understand the dynamics of their unpaid work in order to ascertain whether they might need support as providers and to enhance their well-being. There does not seem to be any simple contradiction between the parallel existence of a universal welfare model of the Swedish kind and an extensive civil society in which older people play important roles as active citizens.
Caregiving and Volunteering among Older People in Sweden − Prevalence and Profiles
Jegermalm, M. and E. Jeppsson Grassman
(2009)
This study examines the role of older people in Swedish society by exploring the prevalence of their informal caregiving and volunteering and by analyzing the profiles of these contributors of unpaid work. Data were collected by means of telephone interviews in a Swedish representative survey conducted in 2005. Our analysis reveals three distinct profiles of people involved in unpaid activities. One of these consists of those involved both in informal help giving and volunteering, a group that has been labeled "super helpers" or "doers" in earlier research. It is important for social policy planners to recognize these groups of older people and better understand the dynamics of their unpaid work in order to ascertain whether they might need support as providers and to enhance their well-being. There does not seem to be any simple contradiction between the parallel existence of a universal welfare model of the Swedish kind and an extensive civil society in which older people play important roles as active citizens
Caregiving burden for the oldest old: a population based study of centenarian caregivers in Northern Japan
Freeman, S., Kurosawa, H., Ebihara, S., & Kohzuki, M
(2010)
Caregiving Burden, Community Services, and Quality of Life of Primary Caregivers of Frail Elderly Persons
Iecovich, E.
(2008)
Caregiving Tasks and Training Interest of Family Caregivers of Medically Ill Homebound Older Adults
Wilkins, V. M., Bruce, M. L. & Sirey, J. A.
(2009)
Carer support needs assessment in end of life home care: developing a tool for routine practice
Ewing, G., Grande, G., & Payne, S.
(2010)
Carers' experiences with overnight respite care : a qualitative study.
Fjelltun, A.-M. S.
(2009)
Carers for older people with co-morbid cognitive impairment in general hospital: Characteristics and psychological well-being
Bradshaw LE, Goldberg SE, Schneider JM, Harwood RH.
(2012)
Objective: This analysis sought to describe the characteristics and well-being of carers of older people with mental health problems admitted to a general hospital. Methods: General medical and trauma orthopaedic patients aged 70years or older admitted to an acute general teaching hospital were screened for mental health problems. Those screened positive, together with a carer, were invited to undergo further assessment with a battery of health status measurements. Carers were interviewed to ascertain strain (caregiver strain index (CSI)), psychological distress (12-item General Health Questionnaire) and quality of life (EQ-5D). Results: We recruited 250 patients to the study, of whom 180 were cognitively impaired and had carers willing to take part. After 6months, 57 patients (32%) had died, and we followed up 100 carers. Carers' own health, in terms of mobility, usual activities, and anxiety, was poor in a third of cases. At the time of admission, high carer strain was common (42% with CSI≥7), particularly among co-resident carers (55%). High levels of behavioural and psychiatric symptoms at baseline were associated with more carer strain and distress. At follow-up, carer strain and distress had reduced only slightly, with no difference in outcomes for carers of patients who moved from the community to a care home. Conclusion: Hospital staff should be alert to sources of carer strain and offer carers practical advice and emotional support. Interventions are required to prevent and manage behavioural and psychiatric symptoms at the time of acute physical illness or to alleviate their effects on carers.
Carers in Sweden: The public support they receive, and the support they desire
Jegermalm, M. and G. Sundström
(2013)
•This article describes and analyses public support received by unpaid carers in Sweden
•Three types of carers were identified
•Very few carers helping someone living in a different household – the large majority of carers – received or desired support aimed directly at them
•Carers mostly wanted public services for the cared-for person
•Despite legislation in 2009 mandating municipalities to offer support to carers, very few of them know about this law
•There is a wide gap between policies and their implementation, but also some reluctance among carers to use public support services for themselves
•Social policy needs to clarify the aims of the support provided and to take the needs of both carers and cared-for persons into account.
This article describes and analyses public support for Swedish unpaid carers, now mandated by law, and also the support that they desire, using surveys conducted in 2008, 2009, and later. Few carers helping someone in a different household – the large majority of the carers – received any support aimed directly at them, such as access to support groups, training, relief service, or financial support. Yet, most carers did not desire any support for themselves. They mostly wanted public services for the cared-for person, all of which may also indirectly support carers. Intra-household carers – about a tenth of all carers – have vastly larger care commitments than other carers. Some of them desire support for themselves, usually relief services of financial support. Three out of 10 of these carers used any public support, despite the new (2009) legislation that only a minority of carers know about. There is a wide gap between policies and their implementation, but also some reluctance among carers to use public support for themselves. The relationship between carers and the state is unclear in Sweden and this reflects on the aims and the forms of support. Stereotypes about 'typical' carers may have impeded adequate forms of support.
Carers in the welfare state : on informal care and support for carers in Sweden.
Jegermalm, M.
(2005)
The general aim of this dissertation is to describe and analyse patterns of informal care and support for carers in Sweden. One specific aim is to study patterns of informal care from a broad population perspective in terms of types of care and types of carer. A typology of four different care categories based on what carers do revealed that women were much more likely than men to be involved at the 'heavy end' of caring, i.e. providing personal care in combination with a variety of other caring tasks. Men were more likely than women to provide some kind of practical help (Study I).Another aim is to investigate which support services are received by which types of informal caregiver. Relatively few informal caregivers in any care category were found to be receiving any kind of support from municipalities or voluntary organizations, for example training or financial assistance (Study II).The same study also examines which kinds of help care recipients receive in addition to that provided by informal carers. It appears that people in receipt of personal care from an informal caregiver quite often also receive help from the public care system, in this case mostly municipal services. However, the majority of those receiving personal, informal care did not receive any help from the public care system or from voluntary organizations or for-profit agencies (Study II).The empirical material in studies I and II comprises survey data from telephone interviews with a random sample of residents in the County of Stockholm aged between 18 and 84.In a number of countries there is a growing interest among social scientists and social policymakers in examining the types of support services that might be needed by people who provide informal care for older people and others. A further aim of the present dissertation is therefore to describe and analyse the carer support that is provided by municipalities and voluntary organizations in Sweden. The dissertation examines whether this support is aimed directly or indirectly at caregivers and discusses whether the Swedish government's special financial investment in help for carers actually led to any changes in the support provided by municipalities and voluntary organisations. The main types of carer support offered by the municipalities were payment for care-giving, relief services and day care. The chief forms of carer support provided by the voluntary organizations were support groups, training groups, and a number of services aimed primarily at the elderly care recipients (Study III).Patterns of change in municipal carer support could be discerned fairly soon. The Swedish government's special allocation to municipalities and voluntary organisations appears to have led to an increase in the number of municipalities providing direct support for carers, such as training, information material and professional caregiver consultants. On the other hand, only minor changes could be discerned in the pattern of carer support services provided by the voluntary organizations. This demonstrates stability and the relatively low impact that policy initiatives seem to have on voluntary organizations as providers (Study IV).In studies III and IV the empirical material consists of survey data from mail questionnaires sent to municipalities and voluntary organizations in the County of Stockholm.In the fields of social planning and social work there appears to be a need to clarify the aims of support services for informal carers. Should the support be direct or indirect? Should it be used to supplement or substitute caregivers? In this process of reappraisal it will be important to take the needs of both caregivers and care recipients into account when developing existing and new forms of support. How informal caregivers and care recipients interact with the care system as a whole is undeniably a fertile field for further research.
Carers perceived. Policy and practice in informal care
Twigg, J. & Atkin, K.
(1994)
Carers, employment and services in their local context.
Yeandle, S., Bennett, C. & Buckner, L.
(2007)