Factors associated with reduced sleep among spouses and caregivers of older adults with varying levels of cognitive decline

Author:

Gallagher Virginia T.1ORCID,Reilly Shannon E.1,Rossetti M. Agustina1,Mattos Meghan2,Manning Carol1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neurology School of Medicine University of Virginia Charlottesville Virginia USA

2. Division of Geriatrics, School of Nursing and School of Medicine University of Virginia Charlottesville Virginia USA

Abstract

BackgroundCaregivers of persons with cognitive decline (PWCD) are at increased risk of poor sleep quantity and quality. It is unclear whether this is due to factors in the caregiver versus in the PWCD.MethodsThis secondary data analysis using Aging, Demographics, and Memory Study data from the Health Retirement Study examined factors contributing to reduced sleep/rest among spouses and caregivers of older adults with varying levels of cognitive decline (cognitively normal (CN), cognitive impairment but not dementia (CIND), or dementia).ResultsIn our preliminary analysis, among N = 218 spouses (not necessarily caregivers) (mean age (SD) = 73.77 (7.30); 70.64% female) of older adults with varying levels of cognitive decline, regression revealed that frequency of sleep complaints was lowest among spouses with CN partners, second highest with CIND partners, and highest with dementia‐partners, X2 = 26.810, P = 0.002. Primary aim: among n = 136 caregivers of PWCD (mean age (SD) = 59.27 (13.97); 74.26% female; 22.79% spouses), we analyzed whether caregiver reduced sleep/rest was predicted by PWCD factors (i.e., frequent nighttime waking, dementia severity) and/or caregiver factors (i.e., depression symptoms, caregiver role overload). Regression revealed that caregiver depression symptoms (d = 0.62) and role overload (d = 0.88), but not PWCD factors, were associated with reduced caregiver sleep/rest after adjusting for demographic factors, caregiving frequency, and shared‐dwelling status (overall model: X2 = 31.876, P = 0.002). Exploratory analyses revealed that a caregiver was 7.901 times more likely (95% CI: 0.99–63.15) to endorse experiencing reduced sleep/rest if back‐up care was not available (P = 0.023).ConclusionFindings highlight that the frequency of reported sleep problems among spouses increases in a stepwise fashion when partners have dementia versus CIND versus CN. The results also emphasise that caregiver mental health and burden are strongly associated with caregiver sleep disturbances and thus may be targets of intervention for caregiver sleep problems.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health,Geriatrics and Gerontology,Gerontology

Reference45 articles.

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