Role of caregiver factors in outpatient medical follow-up post-stroke: observational study in Singapore

Author:

Tyagi Shilpa,Koh Gerald Choon-Huat,Luo Nan,Tan Kelvin Bryan,Hoenig Helen,Matchar David B.,Yoong Joanne,Chan Angelique,Lee Kim En,Venketasubramanian N.,Menon Edward,Chan Kin Ming,De Silva Deidre Anne,Yap Philip,Tan Boon Yeow,Chew Effie,Young Sherry H.,Ng Yee Sien,Tu Tian Ming,Ang Yan Hoon,Kong Keng He,Singh Rajinder,Merchant Reshma A.,Chang Hui Meng,Yeo Tseng Tsai,Ning Chou,Cheong Angela,Ng Yu Li,Tan Chuen Seng

Abstract

Abstract Background Outpatient medical follow-up post-stroke is not only crucial for secondary prevention but is also associated with a reduced risk of rehospitalization. However, being voluntary and non-urgent, it is potentially determined by both healthcare needs and the socio-demographic context of stroke survivor-caregiver dyads. Therefore, we aimed to examine the role of caregiver factors in outpatient medical follow-up (primary care (PC) and specialist outpatient care (SOC)) post-stroke. Method Stroke survivors and caregivers from the Singapore Stroke Study, a prospective, yearlong, observational study, contributed to the study sample. Participants were interviewed 3-monthly for data collection. Counts of PC and SOC visits were extracted from the National Claims Database. Poisson modelling was used to explore the association of caregiver (and patient) factors with PC/SOC visits over 0–3 months (early) and 4–12 months (late) post-stroke. Results For the current analysis, 256 stroke survivors and caregivers were included. While caregiver-reported memory problems of a stroke survivor (IRR: 0.954; 95% CI: 0.919, 0.990) and caregiver burden (IRR: 0.976; 95% CI: 0.959, 0.993) were significantly associated with lower early post-stroke PC visits, co-residing caregiver (IRR: 1.576; 95% CI: 1.040, 2.389) and negative care management strategies (IRR: 1.033; 95% CI: 1.005, 1.061) were significantly associated with higher late post-stroke SOC visits. Conclusion We demonstrated that the association of caregiver factors with outpatient medical follow-up varied by the type of service (i.e., PC versus SOC) and temporally. Our results support family-centred care provision by family physicians viewing caregivers not only as facilitators of care in the community but also as active members of the care team and as clients requiring care and regular assessments.

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Family Practice

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