| Literature DB >> 34588234 |
Gemma F Spiers1, Jennifer Liddle2,3, Tafadzwa Patience Kunonga2, Ishbel Orla Whitehead2, Fiona Beyer2, Daniel Stow2, Claire Welsh2, Sheena E Ramsay2, Dawn Craig2,3, Barbara Hanratty2,3.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: To identify and map evidence about the consequences of unpaid caring for all carers of older people, and effective interventions to support this carer population.Entities:
Keywords: geriatric medicine; health policy; primary care
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34588234 PMCID: PMC8483048 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2020-046187
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Review criteria
| Inclusion criteria | ||
| Synthesis 1: consequences of caring | Synthesis 2: interventions for carers | |
| Population | Carers (eg, unpaid, family, ‘informal’) of older adults. No age criteria for care recipients are specified, but must be, or likely to include, older populations (eg, people with dementia). | |
| Intervention | Not applicable. | Any carer intervention that is targeted only on the carer (ie, not a joint carer and care recipient intervention) and which aims to improve carers’ health, well-being and/or access to services. |
| Comparator | No comparator, or non-carers. | Any or no comparator, including usual care. |
| Outcome | Health status, quality of life, well-being, incident ill health, admission to hospital, financial well-being, poverty, measured changes in material circumstances, social relationships including loneliness, isolation, social support, social networks. | |
| Study design | Systematic reviews (those that meet 3 of 5 DARE criteria). | |
DARE, Database of Abstracts of Reviews of Effects.
Figure 1Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) flow chart. DARE, Database of Abstracts of Reviews of Effects.
Overview of systematic reviews reporting evidence about the consequences of caring
| Study | Date | Studies in review (n) | Data range of included studies | Population (care recipient) | Type of consequence/impact reported | Do studies within the review compare presence/level of impact with non-carer samples? | Does the review identify evidence about impact for specific carer subgroups relating to age, sex, socioeconomic status and geographical location? | Synthesis | Indicative risk of bias |
| Amer Nordin | 2019 | 19 | 1990–2017 | Older people | ‘Caregiver burden’, quality of life, perceived difficulty assisting recipient | No | No | Narrative | High |
| Bom | 2019 | 15 | 2009–2017 | Older people | Mental health, physical health | Yes, controls matched for caregiver health | Sex, SES, location (European region) | Narrative | High |
| Ge and Mordiffi | 2017 | 7 | 1999–2014 | Older people with cancer | ‘Caregiver burden’ prevalence and severity | No | Sex, SES, age | Narrative | Moderate |
| Jansen | 2018 | 14 | 1994–2016 | Older cancer survivors | Prevalence and predictors of ‘caregiver burden’, depression, anxiety, self-esteem, distress, communication issues, stress and QoL | Yes, general population | Sex, SES | Narrative | High |
| Namasivayam-MacDonald and Shune | 2018 | 4 | 2002–2017 | Older people | ‘Caregiver burden’ associated with feeding difficulties | No | No | Narrative | High |
| Ringer | 2017 | 9 | 1997–2012 | Older people with frailty | ‘Caregiver burden’, negative reactions to caregiving | Unclear | No | Narrative | Moderate |
QoL, quality of life; SES, socioeconomic status.
Overview of systematic reviews reporting evidence about carer interventions
| Study | Date published | Studies in review (n) | Data range of included studies | Population (care recipient) | Interventions evaluated | Outcome | Synthesis | Indicative risk of bias |
| Domingues | 2018 | 4 | 2013–2016 | Older people with mild cognitive impairment | Cognitive, multicomponent | ‘Burden’, quality of life, anxiety, mood | Narrative | High |
| Guay | 2017 | 12 | 2000–2015 | Older people | Internet-based interventions, including education, self-help therapeutic and human-supported therapeutic | Depression, anxiety, stress, ‘strain’, ‘burden’, physical burden, self-perceived health, quality of life | Narrative | High |
| Lopez-Hartmann | 2012 | 10 | 2002–2009 | Older people | Individual and group psychosocial support | Depression, ‘burden’, stress, ‘role strain’, coping, knowledge, social support, anxiety, economic burden | Narrative | High |
| Mason | 2007 | 22 | 1985–2003 | Older people | Respite | Satisfaction, ‘burden’ | Both | Low |
| Murfield | 2019 | 4 | 2013–2018 | Older people | Mindfulness+stress reduction, yoga and meditation | Self-compassion, ‘other health’ outcome | Narrative | Moderate |
| Shaw | 2009 | 104 | 2005–2009 | Older people | Respite | ‘Burden’, depression, anxiety, morale, anger, hostility, caregiving relationship | Both | Low |
Figure 2Unpaid caring as a social determinant of health: an adaptation of Dahlgren and Whitehead’s54 model.