Effectiveness of interventions aimed at improving grief and depression in caregivers of people with dementia: A systematic review and meta‐analysis

Author:

Sánchez‐Alcón Miriam1ORCID,Sánchez‐Ramos José Luis1ORCID,Garrido‐Fernández Almudena1ORCID,Sosa‐Cordobés Elena1ORCID,Ortega‐Galán Ángela María1ORCID,Ramos‐Pichardo Juan Diego1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Nursing Faculty, Nursing Department University of Huelva Huelva Spain

Abstract

AbstractCaregivers of people suffering from dementia may go through a grieving process prior to the death of the cared‐for person, which is related to mental health and physical problems. Interventions aimed at improving grief and depression are being used in response to these difficulties. The aim of this study was to synthesize and evaluate the evidence for the effectiveness of interventions aimed at improving the grief process in home‐based caregivers of people with dementia with the aim of reducing grief and depression. A systematic review, including a meta‐analysis, was designed. Following the PRISMA guideline, original articles were searched in the databases: Medline, WOS, Scopus and PsycINFO, up to September 2022. Articles that evaluated interventions aimed at improving the grief process in caregivers of people with dementia, whose care recipients were alive at the beginning of the study at minimum and living at home were selected. Grief and depression were considered outcome variables. A meta‐analysis was carried out with a fixed effects model for these variables and for the domains of the Caregiver Grief Scale (CGS). Eight articles met the inclusion and exclusion criteria. Most of the interventions aimed at improving the grief process showed an improvement in grief and depression. The ‘emotional pain’ and ‘absolute loss’ domains of the CGS stood out with an improvement in these variables. Interventions aimed at improving the grief process are relatively effective in reducing grief and depression. Interventions that are even more effective and more robust studies are needed.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Pshychiatric Mental Health

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