OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the effectiveness of a voluntary sector based befriending scheme in improving psychological wellbeing and quality of life for family carers of people with dementia. DESIGN: Single blind randomised controlled trial. SETTING:Community settings in East Anglia and London. PARTICIPANTS: 236 family carers of people with primary progressive dementia. INTERVENTION: Contact with a befriender facilitator and offer of match with a trained lay volunteer befriender compared with no befriender facilitator contact; all participants continued to receive "usual care." MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Carers' mood (hospital anxiety and depression scale-depression) and health related quality of life (EuroQoL) at 15 months post-randomisation. RESULTS: The intention to treat analysis showed no benefit for the intervention "access to a befriender facilitator" on the primary outcome measure or on any of the secondary outcome measures. CONCLUSIONS: In common with many carers' services, befriending schemes are not taken up by all carers, and providing access to a befriending scheme is not effective in improving wellbeing. Trial registration Current CONTROLLED TRIALS: ISRCTN08130075.
RCT Entities:
OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the effectiveness of a voluntary sector based befriending scheme in improving psychological wellbeing and quality of life for family carers of people with dementia. DESIGN: Single blind randomised controlled trial. SETTING: Community settings in East Anglia and London. PARTICIPANTS: 236 family carers of people with primary progressive dementia. INTERVENTION: Contact with a befriender facilitator and offer of match with a trained lay volunteer befriender compared with no befriender facilitator contact; all participants continued to receive "usual care." MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Carers' mood (hospital anxiety and depression scale-depression) and health related quality of life (EuroQoL) at 15 months post-randomisation. RESULTS: The intention to treat analysis showed no benefit for the intervention "access to a befriender facilitator" on the primary outcome measure or on any of the secondary outcome measures. CONCLUSIONS: In common with many carers' services, befriending schemes are not taken up by all carers, and providing access to a befriending scheme is not effective in improving wellbeing. Trial registration Current CONTROLLED TRIALS: ISRCTN08130075.
Authors: Georgina Charlesworth; Karen Burnell; Jennifer Beecham; Zoë Hoare; Juanita Hoe; Jennifer Wenborn; Martin Knapp; Ian Russell; Bob Woods; Martin Orrell Journal: Trials Date: 2011-09-15 Impact factor: 2.279