Burden of Caregiving in Mild to Moderate Dementia: An Asian Experience

Author:

Lim P'ing Ping Joy,Sahadevan Suresh,Choo Geok Kim,Anthony Philomena

Abstract

This survey sought to determine (a) the prevalence of carer stress in patients with mild to moderate dementia, (b) whether caregiver burden was already associated with plans to institutionalize patients, and (c) which patient-related and caregiver-related variables best predicted caregiver burden. The principal caregivers of 93 Asian patients with mild to moderate dementia attending an outpatient cognitive assessment clinic were interviewed via a structured questionnaire that focused upon (a) patient-related variables such as their behavioral and functional abnormalities; and (b) caregiver-related variables such as whether they were having problems looking after the patients, the duration of their caregiving, their associated feelings of anger and/or depression, and their financial status as well as intentions to institutionalize patients. Forty-nine percent of caregivers reported problems in looking after the patients, and their perception of difficulties was significantly associated with institutionalization plans for the patients. Logistic regression analysis using a forward variable selection procedure showed two of the patients' behavioral abnormalities (repetition, agitation) and one of their functional impairments (urinary incontinence) as well as the carers' depressed feelings to be predictive of the carers' problematic status, explaining 40% of the variance. It is important that even in the early stages of dementia, the medical assessment also evaluate behavioral, functional, and social dimensions of the illness, so that appropriate interventions can be implemented to reduce caregiving burden and delay institutionalization.

Publisher

Cambridge University Press (CUP)

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health,Geriatrics and Gerontology,Gerontology,Clinical Psychology

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