Literature DB >> 27607750

Barriers to Communication With a Healthcare Provider and Health Literacy About Incontinence Among Informal Caregivers of Individuals With Dementia.

Jean Mullins1, Donna Z Bliss, Sharon Rolnick, Casey Arntson Henre, Jody Jackson.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: The purpose of this study was to examine barriers to communicating with healthcare professionals and health literacy about incontinence among different types of informal caregivers of individuals with Alzheimer disease (AD).
DESIGN: Descriptive secondary analysis. SUBJECTS AND
SETTING: The sample included 48 family/friend adult caregivers of individuals who had AD. Seventy-five percent were female; their mean age was 64 ± 14 years (mean ± SD). Caregivers were spouses (44%), daughters (31%), or extended family members/friends (25%). Nearly half (48%) of caregivers had a racially or ethnically diverse background; 58% of their care recipients had incontinence.
METHODS: Data were collected via focus groups, interviews, and written surveys. Verbal responses were audiotaped, transcribed, and analyzed for themes by caregiver type using content analysis.
RESULTS: Caregivers of persons with AD described role-related barriers to improving health literacy about incontinence and its management. Main themes of barriers emerged for each type of role that were emotive in nature for daughters, experiential for both spouse caregivers, system related for husbands, and relational (being perceived as an outsider) for extended family/friends.
CONCLUSIONS: Nurse continence specialists have an important role in raising health literacy about incontinence and its management for informal caregivers of individual with AD. Results inform the development of interventions that are tailored to the type of caregiver as recommended by national health literacy initiatives with the aim of improving outcomes such as incontinence of care recipients.

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Mesh:

Year:  2016        PMID: 27607750      PMCID: PMC5017302          DOI: 10.1097/WON.0000000000000263

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Wound Ostomy Continence Nurs        ISSN: 1071-5754            Impact factor:   1.741


  25 in total

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9.  Healthcare providers' perspectives on communicating incontinence and skin damage information with patients with dementia and their family caregivers: a descriptive study.

Authors:  Sharon Rolnick; Donna Z Bliss; Jody M Jackson; Casey Arntson; Jean Mullins; Kenneth Hepburn
Journal:  Ostomy Wound Manage       Date:  2013-04       Impact factor: 2.629

10.  Health literacy associations between Hispanic elderly patients and their caregivers.

Authors:  Cesar H Garcia; Sara E Espinoza; Michael Lichtenstein; Helen P Hazuda
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6.  Is health literacy of family carers associated with carer burden, quality of life, and time spent on informal care for older persons living with dementia?

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7.  Understanding how to facilitate continence for people with dementia in acute hospital settings: a mixed methods systematic review and thematic synthesis.

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