| Literature DB >> 31345170 |
Carolin Donath1, Katharina Luttenberger2, Elmar Graessel2, Jennifer Scheel2, Anna Pendergrass2, Elisa-Marie Behrndt2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Day-care and telephone counseling have been discussed as effective support measures for caregivers of people with cognitive impairment.Entities:
Keywords: Day-care; Dementia, MCI; Informal caregivers; Telephone intervention
Year: 2019 PMID: 31345170 PMCID: PMC6659298 DOI: 10.1186/s12877-019-1207-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Geriatr ISSN: 1471-2318 Impact factor: 3.921
Fig. 1Flowchart depicting the composition of the samples
Baseline characteristics of participants of the German Day-Care Study for the sample with 12-months follow-up data (n = 304)
| Characteristics | Intervention group | Control group | Test for group differences |
|---|---|---|---|
| ( | ( | ( | |
| Age, | 60.0 (11.8) | 59.0 (11.3) | .463a |
| Women, no. (%) | 128 (74.0) | 99 (75.6) | .753b |
| Educational attainment (yrs.), | 10.8 (2.8) | 10.8 (2.8) | .809a |
| Occupation: Employed, no. (%) | 89 (51.4) | 72 (55.0) | .543b |
| Marital status, no. (%) | .755 b | ||
| Married/long-term relationship | 133 (76.9) | 103 (78.6) | |
| Widowed/Divorced | 24 (13.9) | 19 (14.5) | |
| Single | 16 (9.2) | 9 (6.9) | |
| Relationship to care recipient, no. (%) | .846 b | ||
| Spouse | 50 (28.9) | 36 (27.5) | |
| Son/daughter (in-law) | 113 (65.3) | 89 (67.9) | |
| Others | 10 (5.8) | 6 (4.6) | |
| Caregiver burden (BSFC-s), | 11.7 (8.0) | 13.0 (7.5) | .157a |
| Depressiveness (WHO-5), | 12.0 (6.0) | 12.0 (5.6) | .799a |
| Benefits (BIZA-D), | 12.7 (4.9) | 12.5 (5.5) | .747a |
| Health-related quality of life (EQ-5D-5 L), | 0.9 (0.2) | 0.8 (0.2) | .140a |
| Age, | 81.1 (7.4) | 81.0 (7.6) | .843a |
| Women, no. (%) | 107 (61.8) | 82 (62.6) | .894b |
| Educational attainment (yrs.), | 9.8 (2.5) | 9.6 (2.2) | .566a |
| Cognitive impairment (MMSE), | 19.7 (4.7) | 19.7 (4.7) | .931a |
| Mild cognitive impairment | 25.8 (1.5) | 26.2 (1.5) | .215a |
| Mild dementia | 20.5 (1.8) | 20.5 81.7) | .986a |
| Moderate dementia | 14.5 (2.4) | 14.9 (2.0) | .349a |
| Activities of daily living (ETAM), | 18.0 (7.0) | 17.8 (7.4) | .881a |
| Social behavior (NOSGER), | 15.5 (4.2) | 15.5 (4.4) | .943a |
| Neuropsychiatric symptomatology (NPI), | 5.0 (2.7) | 5.3 (2.7) | .272a |
| Care level, no. (%)iii | .408b | ||
| None | 7 (4.0) | 12 (9.2) | |
| 0 | 16 (9.2) | 13 (9.9) | |
| 1 | 95 (54.9) | 63 (48.1) | |
| 2 | 53 (30.6) | 42 (32.1) | |
| 3 | 2 (1.2) | 1 (0.8) | |
| Use of anti-dementive medication, no. (%)iv | 120 (69.4) | 98 (74.8) | .297b |
| Main caregiver, no. (%) | 153 (88.4) | 119 (90.8) | .499b |
| Sole informal caregiver, no. (%) | 97 (56.1) | 70 (53.4) | .648b |
| Living together, no. (%) | 82 (47.4) | 59 (45.0) | .683b |
| Duration of informal care (month), | 61.5 (50.1) | 60.3 (55.1) | .846a |
| Frequency of day-care use per week, | 1.9 (1.2) | 1.9 (1.1) | .809a |
| Informal care time per day (h), | 3.0 (2.1) | 3.1 (2.0) | .538a |
| No. of additional offers of formal care support, | 1.6 (1.3) | 1.6 (1.3) | .761a |
| Use of other offers of caregiver counseling (%)viii | 44 (25.4) | 47 (35.9) | .058b |
i Minimum: 7 yrs. (no compulsory school-leaving certificate) – Maximum: 18 yrs. (university degree)
ii Mild Cognitive Impairment: MMSE 30–24, Mild dementia: MMSE 23–18, Moderate dementia: MMSE 17–10
iii Extent to which nursing care is needed according to the German Health and Care Insurance: none (no needs), 0 (low needs), 1 (moderate needs), 2 (high needs), and 3 (very high needs)
iv Intake of memantine or acetylcholinesterase inhibitors
v Average frequency per week in the first month
vi Hours of average informal care per day adjusted for day-care attendance at baseline
vii Sum index of (in addition to day-care) formal care and support offers used (care service, care group, meals on wheels, respite care, ambulatory care service, home help service)
viii Displays the use of either one: caregiver skill training/counseling service for caregivers/support group for caregivers at the beginning of the study
a t-Test/U-Test
b Chi-square Test
Descriptive statistics for the dependent variables caregiver burden/depressiveness by group for the three measurement points (N = 304)
| Variable | Descriptives | t-Test for independent samples | Effect size for mean difference | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mean | Standard Deviation | ΔM (SD) | t (df) | Cohen’s d [95%-CI] | |||
| Caregiver Burden | |||||||
| Intervention group ( | T0 | 11.71 | 8.00 | −.20 (5.39)a | t (302) = 1.53 | .126 | 0.177 [−0.051; 0.406] |
| T1 | 10.93 | 7.77 | |||||
| T2 | 11.50 | 8.26 | |||||
| Control group ( | T0 | 12.98 | 7.48 | .76 (5.49)a | |||
| T1 | 12.83 | 7.90 | |||||
| T2 | 13.75 | 8.24 | |||||
| Depressiveness (reverse coded) | |||||||
| Intervention group ( | T0 | 11.90 | 6.03 | −.05 (5.17)b | t (302) = 1.49 | .136 | 0.173 [−0.056; 0.401] |
| T1 | 12.48 | 5.92 | |||||
| T2 | 11.85 | 5.96 | |||||
| Control group ( | T0 | 12.07 | 5.61 | −.98 (5.65)b | |||
| T1 | 11.69 | 5.66 | |||||
| T2 | 11.09 | 6.04 | |||||
aPositive values depict a worsening in the development of the outcome
bNegative values depict a worsening in the development of the outcome
Fig. 2Depiction of the main effects of caregiver burden with within- and between-subject factors. Legend: * significant difference, p < .05
Secondary Analysis: Multiple linear regression analysis with caregiver burden after 12 months (T2) as the dependent variable (n = 304)
| Caregiver Burden (12-month follow up = T2) | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Group (CG/IG) | −1.462 | −.087 | −1.708 | .089 | −3.147 | .223 |
| Age caregiver | .081 | .113 | 2.132 | .006 | .156 | |
| Sex caregiver (0 = female, 1 = male) | −2.249 | −.118 | −2.301 | −4.172 | −.326 | |
| MAKS therapy available in day-care for the last 6 months (t1-t2) | .093 | .005 | .098 | .922 | −1.775 | 1.961 |
| Frequency of day-care use | −.194 | −.024 | −.476 | .634 | −.995 | .607 |
| Activities of daily living (ETAM) | −.025 | −.022 | −.407 | .684 | −.148 | .097 |
| Informal care time per day (h) | .749 | .219 | 4.215 | .399 | 1.099 | |
| Major adverse event in the care of the PCI in the last 6 months (0 = no, 1 = yes) | .957 | .053 | 1.042 | .298 | −.851 | 2.765 |
| Major event in the life situation of the caregiver in the last 6 months (0 = no, 1 = yes) | .886 | .045 | .865 | .388 | −1.130 | 2.902 |
| Social behavior (NOSGER) | .117 | .060 | 1.101 | .272 | −.092 | .325 |
| Neuropsychiatric symptomatology (NPI) | .671 | .217 | 3.953 | .337 | 1.004 | |
| No. of additional offers of formal care support | .436 | .056 | 1.098 | .273 | −.345 | 1.218 |
| Use of other offers of caregiver counseling (0 = no, 1 = yes) | 3.591 | .198 | 3.698 | 1.680 | 5.502 | |
Significant p-values (<.05) are in bold.
Abbreviations: BSFC-s Burden Scale for Family Caregivers short (score), CG Control Group, IG Intervention Group, MAKS-therapy Multicomponent Therapy for cognitively impaired (motoric -, activities of daily living-, cognitive stimulation), ETAM Erlangen Test of Activities of Daily Living, PCI Person with cognitive impairment, NOSGER Nurses Observation Scale for Geriatric Patients, Subscale Social Behavior, NPI Neuropsychiatric Inventory
Fig. 3Main effects of depressiveness (reverse coded) with within- and between-subject factors
Fig. 4Illustration of effects based on difference scores (t2-t0) for subjective caregiver burden – by subgroups characterized by different levels of severity of cognitive impairment
Subgroup-specific descriptive statistics for change in the dependent variables caregiver burden/depressiveness by the severity of cognitive impairment (n = 304)
| Variable | Descriptives | t-test for independent samples | Effect size for mean difference | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mean Diff. | Standard Deviation | t (df) | Cohen’s d | |||
| IG ( | MCI | −.46a | 4.67 | t (69) = 1.56 | .124 | 0.374 [−0.109; 0.857] |
| CG ( | MCI | 1.30a | 4.77 | |||
| IG ( | mild | −1.44a | 5.07 | t (122) = 2.44 | 0.443 [0.079; 0.808] | |
| CG ( | mild | 1.00a | 6.09 | |||
| IG ( | moderate | 1.47a | 5.87 | t (107) =−1.19 | .238 | 0.229 [−0.611; 0.154] |
| CG ( | moderate | .18a | 5.28 | |||
| IG ( | MCI | .46b | 6.08 | t (69) =−.61 | .542 | 0.147 [−0.620; 0.329] |
| CG ( | MCI | −.30b | 3.63 | |||
| IG ( | mild | .76b | 4.69 | t (122) =−2.86 | 0.520 [−0.886; −0.154] | |
| CG ( | mild | −1.92b | 5.77 | |||
| IG ( | moderate | −1.37b | 4.88 | t (87.88) = .88 | .382 | 0.169 [−0.213; 0.551] |
| CG ( | moderate | −.39b | 6.43 | |||
Significant p-values (<.05) are in bold
bNegative values depict a worsening in the outcome
Positive values depict a worsening in the outcome
Fig. 5Illustration of effects based on difference scores (t2-t0) for depressiveness (operationalized as “well-being”) – by subgroups characterized by different levels of severity of cognitive impairment