| Literature DB >> 28825686 |
Siobhan T O'Dwyer1,2, Wendy Moyle3,4, Tara Taylor5, Jennifer Creese6, Melanie Zimmer-Gembeck7,8.
Abstract
There is a growing body of research on resilience in family carers of people with dementia, but carers' voices are noticeably absent from it. The aim of this study was to explore carers' definitions of resilience and their opinions on the factors associated with resilience. Twenty-one in-depth interviews were conducted in Australia with people who were currently, or had previously been, caring for a family member with dementia. Transcripts were analysed thematically and three themes emerged: the presence of resilience, the path to resilience, and characteristics of the resilient carer. Although carers struggled to define resilience, the vast majority considered themselves resilient. Carers identified a range of traits, values, environments, resources, and behaviours associated with resilience, but there was no consensus on the relative importance or causal nature of these factors. Carers also considered resilience to be domain- and context-specific, but did not agree on whether resilience was a trait or a process. These findings highlight both the importance of including carers' voices in resilience research and the limitations of the extant literature. There is much to be done to develop a field of carer resilience research that is theoretically sound, methodologically rigorous, and reflects the lived experience of carers. A model is provided to prompt future research.Entities:
Keywords: acceptance; adversity; caregivers; dementia; resilience
Year: 2017 PMID: 28825686 PMCID: PMC5618065 DOI: 10.3390/bs7030057
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Behav Sci (Basel) ISSN: 2076-328X
Participant demographics.
| Participant | Age | Gender | Care Type a | Person with Dementia | Other b |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Participant 1 | 62 | F | IC | Husband | |
| Participant 2 | 83 | M | IC | Wife | |
| Participant 3 | 83 | M | BD | Wife | |
| Participant 4 | 73 | F | BD | Husband | Migrant |
| Participant 5 | 85 | M | BD | Wife | Migrant |
| Participant 6 | 72 | F | HC | Husband | Migrant, Rural/Remote |
| Participant 7 | 56 | F | BD | Mother | |
| Participant 8 | 60 | F | HC | Husband | Rural/Remote |
| Participant 9 | 69 | F | BD | Husband | Migrant, Rural/Remote |
| Participant 10 | 74 | M | HC | Wife | Rural/Remote |
| Participant 11 | 76 | M | HC | Wife | Rural/Remote |
| Participant 12 | 59 | F | IC | Mother | |
| Participant 13 | 75 | M | HC | Brother | |
| Participant 14 | 89 | M | BD | Wife | |
| Participant 15 | 37 | F | BD | Mother | |
| Participant 16 | 72 | F | HC | Husband | |
| Participant 17 | 48 | F | HC | Husband | |
| Participant 18 | 60 | F | IC | Husband | |
| Participant 19 | 52 | F | HC | Mother-in-law | LGBT |
| Participant 20 | 64 | F | HC | Father | |
| Participant 21 | 50 | F | HC | Husband |
Notes: a HC: Caring at home; IC: Person with dementia in long-term care; BD: Bereaved. b LGBT: Lesbian, gay, bisexual, or transgender.
Figure 1A proposed model of resilience in family carers of people with dementia.