Author:
Sugihara Yoko,Sugisawa Hidehiro
Abstract
Abstract
Background
The number of caregivers performing medical care tasks at home for older adults is expected to increase. Family caregivers, who are not healthcare professionals, are likely to find these activities difficult and burdensome. However, appropriate support may decrease the negative and increase the positive aspects of caregiving. This study investigated direct associations between caregivers providing medical care at home and their negative and positive appraisals of caregiving (burden and gain), indirect associations through healthcare professional support and informal support, and whether the associations between medical care tasks and caregivers’ appraisals of caregiving differed based on the support received.
Methods
Interview surveys were conducted in 2013, 2016, and 2019 in a Tokyo Metropolitan Area city with family caregivers of community-dwelling older adults who were certified as requiring care in Japan’s long-term care insurance system. This study analyzed the combined data from each survey (n = 983). Structural equation modeling (SEM) analysis was utilized to examine direct associations between providing medical care and caregiver appraisals and indirect relationships through healthcare professional support and informal support. The modulating effects of these forms of support on the relationship between medical care and caregiver appraisals were assessed using multigroup SEM analyses.
Results
Approximately 9% of family caregivers provided medical care at home. The results of SEM analyses, controlled for care recipients’ physical and cognitive difficulties; caregivers’ age, sex, and economic condition; and survey year, revealed no direct associations between providing medical care and caregivers’ sense of burden and gain. They also did not reveal any indirect effects through either healthcare professional support or informal support. However, the results of multigroup SEM analyses indicated that caregivers providing medical care who used home-visit services by physicians and/or nurses, compared to those who did not, tended to exhibit a greater sense of gain.
Conclusions
These results suggest that family caregivers providing medical care at home can positively change their appraisals of caregiving if they receive appropriate support. Home medical care services provided by healthcare professionals can effectively support caregivers. Developing strategies and policies to make medical care services at home more accessible to caregivers is crucial.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Geriatrics and Gerontology
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