| Literature DB >> 24583789 |
Vicky McKechnie1, Chris Barker, Josh Stott.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The well-being of informal carers of people with dementia is an important public health issue. Caring for an elderly relative with dementia may be burdensome and stressful, and can negatively affect the carer's social, family, and professional life. The combination of loss, the physical demands of caregiving, prolonged distress, and biological vulnerabilities of older carers may compromise their physical health, increase social isolation, and increase the risk of anxiety and depressive disorders. Caregiver stress is also linked to negative outcomes for the recipient of care and costs to society, including increased nursing home and hospital admissions. Consequently, carer support interventions are an important component of dementia care. Computer-mediated carer support offers a range of potential advantages compared to traditional face-to-face support groups, including accessibility and the possibility of tailoring to meet individual needs, but there has been little research on its effectiveness so far.Entities:
Keywords: Alzheimer disease; Internet; caregivers; dementia; self-help groups
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24583789 PMCID: PMC3961748 DOI: 10.2196/jmir.3166
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Internet Res ISSN: 1438-8871 Impact factor: 5.428
Figure 1Screenshot of discussion threads on Talking Point’s online forum for carers of people with dementia.
Figure 2Participant flow chart.
Participant information (N=119).
| Demographic characteristic | Mean or frequency | |
| Age in years (range 22-86), mean (SD) | 56 (11.29) | |
| Number of months caring (range 0-408), mean (SD) | 44 (56.94) | |
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| Female | 99 (83.2) |
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| Male | 18 (15.1) |
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| Missing | 2 (1.7) |
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| White British | 112 (94.1) |
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| White other | 4 (3.4) |
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| Other | 3 (2.4) |
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| Employed | 58 (48.7) |
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| Unemployed | 19 (16.0) |
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| Retired | 42 (35.3) |
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| Primary school | 7 (5.9) |
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| GCSEs/equivalent | 22 (18.5) |
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| A levels/equivalent | 16 (13.4) |
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| University degree | 39 (32.8) |
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| Higher degree/equivalent | 18 (15.1) |
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| Other | 9 (7.6) |
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| Father | 22 (18.5) |
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| Mother | 45 (37.8) |
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| Partner | 38 (31.9) |
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| Grandparent | 3 (2.5) |
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| Aunt or uncle | 3 (2.5) |
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| Sibling | 5 (4.2) |
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| Mother- or father-in-law | 6 (5.0) |
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| Other | 3 (2.5) |
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| General practitioner | 24 (20.2) |
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| Mental health worker or counselor | 6 (5.0) |
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| Another health or social care professional | 27 (22.7) |
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| Memory clinic | 22 (18.5) |
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| Other/not specified | 8 (6.7) |
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| No formal support | 55 (46.2) |
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| Friends and/or family | 49 (41.2) |
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| Religious organizations | 2 (1.7) |
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| Recreational groups | 1 (0.8) |
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| Charities, helplines, or forums | 12 (10.1) |
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| Other/not specified | 5 (4.2) |
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| No informal support | 51 (42.8) |
aFigures total more than 100% because 6 participants reported that they were caring for more than 1 person.
Baseline scores on the Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9), Generalized Anxiety Disorder scale (GAD-7), and the Scale for the Quality of the Current Relationship in Caregiving (SQCRC) for those who completed the survey at 12 weeks (completers) and those who did not (noncompleters) and those who used Talking Point (users) and those who did not (nonusers), and pre-post outcome scores.
| Baseline score comparison | Group, mean (SD) |
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| Cohen’s | ||
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| Completers | Noncompleters |
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| PHQ-9 | 9.75 (6.65) | 9.78 (7.35) | 0.39 (117) | .69 | 0.07 |
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| GAD-7 | 10.38 (6.44) | 10.38 (6.65) | 0.00 (117) | .99 | 0.00 |
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| SQCRC | 48.61 (9.20) | 46.69 (10.08) | –1.09 (117) | .28 | –0.12 |
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| Users | Nonusers |
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| PHQ-9 | 9.98 (6.51) | 8.88 (6.78) | 0.52 (56) | .61 | 0.15 |
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| GAD-7 | 9.83 (6.14) | 10.71 (6.15) | –0.47 (56) | .64 | 0.14 |
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| SQCRC | 49.00 (9.04) | 46.88 (9.86) | 0.79 (56) | .43 | 0.23 |
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| Baseline | At 12 weeks |
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| PHQ-9 | 9.75 (6.65) | 9.23 (6.82) | 0.75 (60) | .46 | 0.19 |
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| GAD-7 | 10.38 (6.44) | 9.72 (6.63) | 0.95 (60) | .35 | 0.24 |
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| SQCRC | 48.61 (9.20) | 51.36 (9.87) | –3.04 (60) | .003 | –0.78 |
aNote that t tests were performed on the square root transformed PHQ-9 scores.
Reported usage levels on Talking Point over the 12-week study period.
| Usage variable | Range | Mean | SD |
| Number of forum visits | 0-200 | 17.43 | 37.14 |
| Number of minutes spent on forum | 0-3000 | 373.57 | 589.86 |
| Number of messages/posts written as a reply to someone else | 0-400 | 14.53 | 54.76 |
| Number of new threads/posts started | 0-50 | 2.67 | 8.04 |
Reliable change analysis for Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9), Generalized Anxiety Disorder scale (GAD-7), and the Scale for the Quality of the Current Relationship in Caregiving (SQCRC).
| Measure | Change, n (%) | ||
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| Reliably improved | No change | Reliably deteriorated |
| PHQ-9 | 9 (15%) | 48 (79%) | 4 (7%) |
| GAD-7 | 11 (18%) | 41 (67%) | 9 (15%) |
| SQCRC | 5 (8%) | 55 (90%) | 1 (2%) |
Interviewee information (n=8).
| Participant number | Demographic information | Caring situation |
| 1 | Female; age 51 years; white British | Caring for husband (age 53 years) who has frontotemporal dementia. Participant and her husband live together. Caring for approximately 21 months at time of interview. |
| 2 | Female; age 48 years; white British | Caring for mother who has a mixed diagnosis of vascular dementia and Alzheimer disease. Mother does not live with participant. Caring for approximately 29 months at time of interview. |
| 3 | Female; age 43 years; white British | Caring for father who has dementia and lives locally. Caring for approximately 28 months at time of interview. |
| 4 | Male; age 70 years; white British | Caring for wife who has vascular dementia. Participant and his wife live together. Caring for approximately 33 months at time of interview. |
| 5 | Male; age 84 years; white British | Caring for wife who has Alzheimer disease. Caring for approximately 30 months at time of interview. Wife moved into care home 1 year previous. |
| 6 | Female; age 69 years; white British | Does not consider herself a carer because husband is in the early stages of Alzheimer disease and does not require significant levels of support. At time of interview, it was approximately 29 months since memory problems began. |
| 7 | Female; age 63 years; white British | Caring for mother-in-law who lives locally and has dementia. Caring for approximately 12 months at time of interview. |
| 8 | Female; age 61 years; white British | Caring for husband who has dementia. Participant and her husband live together. Caring for approximately 18 months at the time of interview. |
Summary and illustration of domains and themes from the thematic analysis.
| Domain and theme | Prevalencea | Illustrative quotations | |
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| I am not the only one going through this | Typical | “Every time I realize ‘that’s me, that’s me! I’m going through that, that’s me!’ I can relate to so much of what’s on there.” [P1] |
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| Reduced isolation and loneliness | General | “All of a sudden, I’m in the flat on my own. And I have nobody to talk to...so the only thing I’ve got now, really, is Talking Point” [P5] “Before my son introduced me to that [Talking Point] I felt that I was on my own, even though, like I said, I have fantastic support from the help service and family and everything, it still, I still felt alone.” [P1] |
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| Normalizing | Typical | “I’m feeling like I want my dad to die, because I don’t want to see him go through this, and he’d be happier. And then you feel full of guilt, but you go on [to Talking Point], and you’re not the only one feeling that, or you’re not the only one that has felt that. And it makes you feel OK, normal.” [P3] |
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| Other users have experience and are therefore understanding | Typical | “And that is the great strength of it. Everybody on Talking Point has hands-on experience of dealing with dementia. And they make allowances for you, as they did for me.” [P5] |
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| Being able to share and let off steam | Typical | “If nothing else, it’s purely somewhere to let off steam.” [P4] |
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| Other users are worse off than I am | Typical | “My goodness, some people are dealing with some incredibly difficult situations...the situation we’ve got at the moment is not that difficult, we ought to be able to work around it.” [P7] “If I’m online and I’m reading other people’s posts and it’s quite distressing, you know, it’s quite easy to get distressed by it. So there are times when I just don’t go on it because I think, oh, it’s too painful, really, for me.” [P2] |
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| Not necessarily needing to post to benefit | General | “I think it’s more useful for me to read other people’s experiences.” [P6] |
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| Being able to give advice and support to other users | General | “It’s nice to be giving something back for the information that you’re getting. Or being able to support people as the support you receive.” [P3]. “It’s helpful in that you think, well, at least you know slightly more than someone else...It gives you a little bit of a boost to know that you can help somebody.” [P6] |
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| I can ask questions and get the support that I might not be able to get, or might not want to get, elsewhere | Typical | “It’s not the kind of thing you would read in a leaflet that you pick up anywhere.” [P6] “Me personally, I don’t want to go sit in front of a—what would you go sit in front of?—a doctor, or a whoever. I don’t want to talk that way.” [P3] |
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| I can get information and advice that I would not know where else to get | Rare | “For someone who is totally ignorant of Alzheimer’s it has answered questions that I don’t know where I would have got the answer from.” [P6] |
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| Control | Typical | “I can go for months without bothering with it...I’ll utilize Talking Point when I need to. That maybe sounds a bit selfish, but I think that’s the advantage of it for me.” [P2] “You’re not seeing what it’s going to be like, you’re not seeing, you’re not hearing what it’s, you read what you want to read.” [P3] “I find it’s very easy to navigate to and from the titles to pick up things that might be useful.” [P7] |
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| Anonymity | Typical | “What I say there, I am opening up my heart to a very large extent and I am opening myself up and being totally honest about my feelings, and in some cases I wouldn’t want other members of my family, for example, to see some of these things...I wouldn’t want them to know exactly how I feel about certain things. Because when you are with other people you never really uncover your true self, do you?” [P5] “I suppose it’s when you’re sat at home thinking, ‘oh crikey’” you know, someone thinks that’s really awful. And it puts you in a bit of a panic, but I do think the moderators help because they come back with...solutions.” [P2] |
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| Immediate access and responses | Variant | “Now if I have something that is worrying me, I know that I have immediately got someone to talk it over with.” [P8] |
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| No time restrictions | Variant | “I think professional support is generally very time limited. And Talking Point isn’t time limited.” [P2] |
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| Geography is unimportant | Variant | “Particularly with me being mobile around the world as well as the country, it’s offered a support that I wouldn’t have had otherwise.” [P7] |
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| Practical learning and information | General | “Off Talking Point, someone said that animals are really good. So I got him a kitten...It was absolutely brilliant, and I thought ‘thank God for Talking Point’ because when my mum had to go out, he had the kitten to talk to, and the kitten to play with, and the cat even now.” [P3] |
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| Learning how the dementia might progress and what to expect | Typical | “That happened 3 times in the last few weeks, where [husband] hadn’t known where he was. And it has been stressful for him. But had I not known about it, I might have worried more. But having read about it [on Talking Point], I thought, mmm, yes, things do happen.” [P6] “When you’re reading it, you’re thinking, ‘I’ve got all this to come,’ but at the same time, you’re planning.” [P3] “I now look for the kind of problems that other people are having, that I am not having...And so that saddens me in a way that I possibly know more and am looking for things, and really I shouldn’t be.” [P6] |
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| Developing a better understanding of the person with dementia, and consequently becoming a better carer | General | “I don’t reason with her any more, I agree, and I can steer the conversation, and I know the kinds of things to say and the kinds of things to stay away from. And I think I’m a much better person for Talking Point. A much better companion for my wife, I know that.” [P5] |
aGeneral: theme applies to all or all but one of the participants (7-8); typical: theme applies to more than half of the participants (5-6); variant: theme applies to up to half of participants (3-4); rare: theme applies to 1 or 2 participants (1-2).