Living well while providing support: validation of LTCQ-Carer for assessing informal carers’ quality of life

Author:

Potter Caroline M.ORCID,Peters MicheleORCID,Cundell Maureen,McShane RupertORCID,Fitzpatrick RayORCID

Abstract

Abstract Purpose Despite international policies to support the health and wellbeing of informal (family) caregivers, there is no consensus on how to evaluate the effectiveness of carer support. We aimed to develop and validate a new quality-of-life measure for carers (LTCQ-Carer) and to assess its potential for use within a clinical pathway. Methods Psychometric properties of LTCQ-Carer were tested through cognitive interviews (qualitative phase) and a pilot survey (quantitative phase). Participants were family caregivers of people recently diagnosed with mild cognitive impairment (MCI) or dementia, recruited through one of 14 memory clinics in south-east England. They self-completed the new measure and comparative existing measures (EQ-5D, ASCOT-Carer). Ongoing feedback from memory clinic staff on potential use of LTCQ-Carer was collected. Results Interview participants (n = 10) found all draft items of LTCQ-Carer relevant and prompted inclusion of a new item on ‘time to yourself’. Responses from survey participants (n = 107) indicated acceptability (low missing data), high internal reliability (Cronbach’s α = 0.95), and a general construct (single factor loadings 0.43–0.86 for all items). Observation of predicted associations with EQ-5D and ASCOT-Carer supported construct validity. Responsiveness requires further testing as evidence was inconclusive. Clinical staff feedback on potential use was positive. Conclusion LTCQ-Carer is a valid new measure for assessing family caregivers’ quality of life across broad health and social care domains, expanding the range of high-quality tools for evaluating carer support. When used concurrently with patient assessment, it could highlight carer needs and prompt appropriate family support at the earliest point in the clinical pathway.

Funder

National Institute for Health and Care Research

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

Reference45 articles.

1. Potter, C. M., Peters, M., Cundell, M., McShane, R., & Fitzpatrick, R. (2021). Use of the Long-Term Conditions Questionnaire (LTCQ) for monitoring health-related quality of life in people affected by cognitive impairment including dementia: Pilot study in UK memory clinic services. Quality of Life Research, 30(6), 1641–1652. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11136-021-02762-z

2. Alzheimer’s Disease International and Karolinska Institutet. (2018). Global estimates of informal care. Report available at: https://www.alzint.org/u/global-estimates-of-informal-care.pdf. Accessed 30 Jan 2023.

3. UK Government. (2014). Care Act 2014. Available at: https://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/2014/23/contents/enacted. Accessed 30 Jan 2023.

4. Carers UK (2015). Care Act FAQ. Available at: https://www.carersuk.org/help-and-advice/practical-support/getting-care-and-support/care-act-faq#q7. Accessed 30 Jan 2023.

5. Carers UK (2021). State of Caring 2021. Report available at: https://www.carersuk.org/for-professionals/policy/policy-library/state-of-caring-2021-report. Accessed 30 Jan 2023.

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