Evaluating the Dyadic Benefits of Early-Phase Behavioral Interventions: An Exemplar Using Data from Couples Living with Parkinson’s Disease

Author:

Lyons Karen S1ORCID,Russell Luke T2,Bonds Johnson Kalisha3ORCID,Brewster Glenna S3ORCID,Carter Julie H4,Miller Lyndsey M5ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Connell School of Nursing, Boston College, Chestnut Hill , MA, USA

2. Department of Family and Consumer Sciences, Illinois State University, Normal , IL, USA

3. Nell Hodgson Woodruff School of Nursing, Emory University, Atlanta , GA, USA

4. Department of Neurology, Oregon Health & Science University, Portland , OR, USA

5. School of Nursing, Oregon Health & Science University, Portland , OR, USA

Abstract

Abstract Background and Objectives There are a growing number of early-phase (i.e., Stage I, NIH Stage Model) interventions targeted at family care dyads navigating chronic health conditions in older adults. Currently, benefits of these interventions are often evaluated for older adults and their family care partners separately, even when controlling for interdependence. Without understanding benefits (and potential harms) for dyads as a whole, understanding of program impact is incomplete. Moreover, few health behavior interventions involving dyads include relational measures to ensure no unintended consequences for the dyad or account for within-dyad pre-test risk level. Research Design and Methods We used secondary data from a quasi-experimental trial involving 39 couples in which one member of the dyad was living with Parkinson’s Disease as an exemplar demonstration of three proposed approaches: an above-zero approach, a pre-test risk status approach, and an expanded pattern analysis matrix approach. Results Approaches provided evidence for dyadic benefits of the intervention compared to the wait-list comparison condition, but carry different assumptions that did not always categorize dyads similarly. Discussion and Implications Implications of using each approach and selecting different benchmarks for defining success are discussed. The descriptive approaches proposed provide rationale for more intentional evaluation of small-sample, early-phase dyadic interventions.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Geriatrics and Gerontology,Gerontology,General Medicine

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