| Literature DB >> 33877946 |
Melanie Bayly1, Megan E O'Connell2, August Kortzman2, Shelley Peacock3, Debra G Morgan1, Andrew Kirk4.
Abstract
Individuals with young onset dementia and their families face unique challenges, such as disruptions to their life cycle and relationships and a dearth of appropriate supports. Financial consequences have also been noted in the literature yet have not been explored in-depth. The purpose of this research was to qualitatively explore carers' experiences of financial consequences resulting from the young onset dementia of a family member and how these consequences may be managed. Eight carers (7 women and 1 man) provided a written online narrative about their journey with young onset dementia and any financial consequences experienced, with open-ended prompts to elicit details not yet shared. Narratives were inductively coded and analyzed using a thematic narrative approach. Carers described a voluntary or involuntary end to employment for the person with young onset dementia around the time of diagnosis. This engendered ongoing and anticipated financial consequences, combined with the need for carers to balance employment with the provision of care (which often meant early retirement for spousal carers). Common themes were tension between the needs to provide care and earn income, altered financial prospects, costs of care, and lack of available and accessible supports to ameliorate financial consequences. Findings illustrate the reality of financial consequences across the trajectory of young onset dementia. These consequences may manifest differently for spousal and child carers and are not being adequately addressed by existing supports.Entities:
Keywords: dementia; family caregivers; financial consequences; qualitative; young onset dementia
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33877946 PMCID: PMC8670747 DOI: 10.1177/14713012211009341
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Dementia (London) ISSN: 1471-3012
Participant demographic information.
| Carer
| Age | Sex | Kinship | Country | CR
| CR age at symptom onset/diagnosis | Diagnosis (all young onset) | Health insurance |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| 37 | F | Niece | Rural Canada | 52 | 46/49 | AD | None |
|
| 55 | F | Partner | Urban U.S. | 55 | 40/48 | LBD and PD | Veteran’s benefits for CR and none for family |
|
| 49 | F | Child | Urban Canada | 77 | 62/late 60s | AD | Sunlife |
|
| 33 | F | Child | Urban Canada | 57 | 54/55 | AD | CR covered by LTD |
|
| 57 | F | Partner | Rural Canada | 63 | 60/61 | AD with aphasia | Provincial and Blue Cross |
|
| 57 | M | Partner | Urban Canada | 57 | 52/54 | Dementia | None |
|
| 62 | F | Partner | Urban Canada | 65 | 58/61 | Posterior cortical atrophy | Blue Cross x 2 |
|
| 62 | F | Partner | Urban Canada | 63 | 57/59 | AD | Blue Cross |
aParticipant names are pseudonyms.
bCR = care recipient.
Overall tone and focus of carers’ narratives.
| Carer* | Description of narrative | Illustrative quote |
|---|---|---|
|
| The main tone of Nancy’s narrative was frustration. Her story focused primarily on the consequences of her aunt’s dementia on their family and their difficulties as carers due to the lack of appropriate formalized supports. |
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| Karen’s narrative unfolded primarily through answers to our specific questions and focused entirely on the significant financial, social, and emotional impacts she perceived her mother’s young onset dementia had on her and her sibling. Karen’s narrative conveyed a sense of despair at their situation. | “ |
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| Ella’s narrative was a very matter-of-fact presentation of her mother’s symptoms, diagnosis, and ongoing management of young onset dementia. She presented her and her spouse as active carers who do what is required to meet her mother’s needs. |
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| Janice depicted her experiences with young onset dementia as a battle. She believed her husband’s dementia was caused by his military service/exposure to chemicals, and her narrative reflected anger at the lack of formal but also informal support she was receiving despite advocating for her family. |
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| Audrey depicted her experiences with her husband’s young onset dementia as challenging, but her narrative did not convey a sad, frustrated, angry, or despairing tone. She described in detail how her husband has changed since his symptoms began and how their lives continue to change as his health declines. |
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| James’ narrative was one of cautious optimism in the face of challenge. Although he depicted their situation with young onset dementia as difficult, it was clear he took his role as a carer very seriously and felt that his family was managing well despite his wife’s diagnosis and the financial consequences that stemmed from it. |
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| Maryam described in detail how much their lives have changed since the onset of her husband’s dementia symptoms. A significant focus in her narrative was the degree to which her world had shrunk and the loneliness she felt at directing all of her energy toward caring for her husband. |
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| Emma explained the onset of her husband’s symptoms and period of diagnosis in detail. The dominant tone of Emma’s narrative was one of fatigue as she described her worries about finances and the things she has lost or given up as her husband’s young onset dementia progresses. |
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