| Literature DB >> 17662119 |
Carl A Thompson1, Karen Spilsbury, Jill Hall, Yvonne Birks, Colin Barnes, Joy Adamson.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Dementia is an important health and social care problem and is one of the main causes of disability in later life. The number of families affected by dementia will dramatically increase over the next five decades. Despite the implications for health and social care services in the future, the overwhelming majority of care for people with dementia takes place away from health care settings. Providing informal care for someone with dementia can be psychologically, physically and financially expensive and a range of health service interventions aimed at supporting and providing information to these carers has developed to help carers meet these demands. This review examines whether information and support interventions improve the quality of life of people caring for someone with dementia.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2007 PMID: 17662119 PMCID: PMC1951962 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2318-7-18
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Geriatr ISSN: 1471-2318 Impact factor: 3.921
Inclusion criteria
| Study design: | randomised controlled trials. |
| Study participants: | principal informal caregiver (not a paid professional) and care recipient (diagnosed with dementia) dyad living in the community. |
| Intervention: | information and/or support intervention. |
| Outcomes: |
Databases searched
| Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trial |
| Current Controlled trials |
| ClinicalTrials.gov |
| MEDLINE |
| EMBASE |
| PsycINFO |
| CINAHL (Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature) |
| SIGLE (Grey Literature in Europe) |
| ISTP (Index to Scientific and Technical Proceedings) |
| INSIDE (BL database of Conference Proceedings and Journals) |
| Aslib Index to Theses (UK and Ireland theses) |
| Dissertation Abstract (USA) |
| ADEAR (Alzheimer's Disease Clinical Trials Database) |
| Alzheimer Society |
| South Australian Network for Research on Ageing |
| US Dept of Veterans Affairs Cooperative Studies |
| National Institutes of Health (NIH) |
| GlaxoSmithKline |
| Schering Health Care Ltd |
| Hong Kong Health Services Research Fund |
| Medical Research Council (MRC) |
| National Research Register |
| NHS R&D Health Technology Assessment Programme |
| LILACS:Latin American and Carribbean Health Science Literature |
Adequacy of the randomisation process
| i) a central allocation process by an office or third party unaware of subject characteristics |
| ii) pre-numbered packages of support administered to carers sequentially |
| iii) use of an on-site or coded computer system with a locked, unreadable file with allocation occurring only after carers or patient details are inputted |
| iv) assignment via scaled, numbered and opaque envelopes |
| v) other combinations which provide evidence of adequacy in concealment |
| i) study used list or tables to allocate assignments |
| ii) use of "envelopes" or" sealed envelopes |
| iii) simply stating that the study was randomised with no further details |
| i) by using case numbers, dates of birth, age group, alternation or date of referral and other similar methods |
| ii) use of any other system in which allocation can be known in advance such as pre-printed lists of random numbers or open computer allocation lists. |
Figure 1Technology-based computer interventions and depression.
Figure 2Group-based psychoeducational interventions and depression.
Figure 3Group-based psychoeducational interventions and burden.
Figure 4Group-based support interventions and burden.
Figure 5Individual-based psychoeducational interventions and depression.
Figure 6Individual-based psychoeducational interventions and self efficacy.