| Literature DB >> 31727000 |
Emily M Abramsohn1, Jessica Jerome2, Kelsey Paradise3, Tia Kostas4, Wesley Alexandra Spacht5, Stacy Tessler Lindau6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: African American caregivers of community-residing persons with dementia are mostly unpaid and have high rates of unmet basic and health needs. The National Alzheimer's Project Act (NAPA) mandates improved coordination of care for persons with dementia and calls for special attention to racial populations at higher risk for Alzheimer's Disease or related dementias (ADRD) to decrease health disparities. The purpose of this study is to describe the perceptions of African American caregivers of people with dementia about community resources needed to support caregiving as well as their own self-care.Entities:
Keywords: Caregiving; Dementia; Qualitative analysis; Race; Self-care
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31727000 PMCID: PMC6857299 DOI: 10.1186/s12877-019-1341-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Geriatr ISSN: 1471-2318 Impact factor: 3.921
Fig. 1Example HealtheRx for Alzheimer’s Disease and Related Dementias. aThe version of the HealtheRx presented to caregivers in this study included a picture of the person in the role of the Community Health Information Specialist
Caregiver sociodemographic, health and caregiving characteristics (N = 13)
| Domain and measure | N (%) |
|---|---|
| Sociodemographic characteristics | |
| Age in yearsa (median, range) | 58 (44–83) |
| Gender | |
| Women | 10 (77) |
| Men | 3 (23) |
| Insuranceb | |
| Private insurance | 6 (46) |
| Private + Medicare | 3 (23) |
| Medicare + Medicaid | 2 (15) |
| Medicare only | 1 (8) |
| Health characteristics | |
| Self-reported health | |
| Excellent, very good or good | 11 (85) |
| Fair or poor | 2 (15) |
| Common medical conditionsc,d | |
| High blood pressure or hypertension | 6 (46) |
| Osteo- or rheumatoid arthritis | 5 (38) |
| Myocardial infarction, CHF or other heart condition | 5 (38) |
| COPD or asthma | 3 (23) |
| Caregiving characteristics | |
| Relation to person with dementia | |
| Adult child or grandchild | 8 (62) |
| Spouse | 4 (31) |
| Sibling | 1 (8) |
| Caregiver lives with person with dementia | 8 (62) |
| Years caring for person with dementia in community (median, range) | 5 (2–25) |
| Hours per day providing care (median, range) | 6.5 (1–24) |
| Provides care for others | 5 (38) |
| Common caregiving tasksc,e | |
| Meal preparation | 9 (75) |
| Medication management/adherence | 7 (58) |
| Accompany to doctor’s visits | 6 (50) |
| Grocery shopping | 4 (33) |
aCaregivers’ ages are not adjusted for anonymity here but are presented in the aggregate
bOne caregiver refused to answer this question
cResponses are not mutually exclusive
dFour caregivers reported no comorbidities
eOne caregiver did not respond to this question
Quotes exemplary of caregivers’ inability to leave person with dementia unsupervised
| Caregiver characteristics | |
|---|---|
| Inability to leave person with dementia unsupervised as a barrier to their socialization | |
| “She’s gonna have to have love and nothing but lovin’ people around her. Because she would ask you the same question. You gonna get questions from her. As of late, she asks you the same question 15 times. You know, and it takes a lot of patience.” | ID03: 59-year-old daughter |
| “If I was to leave and be gone for a week, I don’t know what she would do or who she would talk to.” | ID05: 67-year-old spouse |
| “There is days where, or there is times where during the day I have to take a deep break … and I have to remember that she has Alzheimer’s, she has dementia. I have to remember that. Because some of the things she says you know, it’s a constant. It’s a constant. And then every day is the same.” | |
| Inability to leave person with dementia unsupervised as a barrier to caregiver self-care | |
| “My mother will go in the refrigerator and pick up anything, eat it, it be done or undone, you know. And you just gotta make sure, you know. Cause she’ll pick up some hamburger undone and eat it there—come on now. So, you have to watch her, you have to keep close contact on her.” | ID03: 59-year-old daughter |
| “We’ll have a six pack, and you’ll look around and she will have grabbed the bottles of pop and she’ll drink three of them. By the time you look back again she’s got the other two! I say, ‘I can’t turn my back on you!’ You know? [laughs]. You can’t do it!” | ID04: 64-year-old son |
| “I’m runnin’ on trial by error. But I’m also now runnin’ on like ‘Nahhhh Imma go with you.’ And if she wants to go somewhere, then we go. So I don’t have a schedule.” | ID05: 67-year-old spouse |
| “But right now, I really get nervous about leaving her at home by herself. Not so much now, because she hasn’t gotten that urge to go. She wants to go somewhere, but she hasn’t gotten that urge to just get up and go on her own.” | |
| “In order for me to feel safe to leave him with the kids, they’d all have to be asleep. I’d have to make sure that no one would be able to wake up until I came back upstairs because once I get home I can’t leave the kids and [NAME] by themselves. It worries me that, first that he might do something like turn on the stove, you know? But second, that if, because they are children that are 7 and 3, if they do anything that aggravates him, will he become violent. So I can’t, and I have to.” | ID12: 50-year-old spouse |