| Literature DB >> 35450152 |
Anisha Walavalkar1, Alison Craswell2,3, Nicholas A Gray1,2,3.
Abstract
Background: Older people with kidney failure often choose conservative kidney care. The experiences and quality of life (QOL) of caregivers who support them are incompletely characterized. Objective: To determine the burden, QOL, and understand experiences of caregivers supporting patients managed conservatively. Design: Systematic review of quantitative and qualitative studies. Sources of information: PubMed, Embase, PsycINFO, CINAHL, and MEDLINE electronic databases were systematically searched for quantitative and qualitative studies published between January 2000 and July 2020. Subjects: Caregivers of adults with kidney failure (estimated glomerular filtration rate < 15 mL/min/1.73 m2) managed conservatively.Entities:
Keywords: caregiver burden; caregivers; chronic; conservative treatment; kidney failure; quality of life
Year: 2022 PMID: 35450152 PMCID: PMC9016578 DOI: 10.1177/20543581221089080
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Can J Kidney Health Dis ISSN: 2054-3581
Figure 1.Literature search.
Characteristics of Included Studies.
| Study | Country | Design | Purpose | N | Patient age | Caregiver age | Female | Relationship |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chan et al
| HK | RCT | Investigate the effectiveness of enhanced psychosocial support in reducing caregiver burden in patients with chronic kidney failure opting for conservative management | 29 | 81.6 ± 14.2 (mean) | 59.8 ± 14.2 (mean) | 76% | SP: 52%; SB: 45%; FM: 4% |
| De Biase et al
| IT | CO | Report on the clinical results, disease progression, burden of care, and QOL of patients and caregivers on prolonged conservative treatment | 11 | 81.5 (mean) 81 (median) 75-88 (range) | 50.7 (mean) | NA | NA |
| Shah et al
| AU, UK | CS | To assess and compare the heath-related QOL and care-related QOL among informal caregivers of older people with end-stage kidney disease, managed with dialysis or comprehensive conservative care | 37 | NA | 76 (median) | 70% | SP: 63%; CH: 28%; FM: 9% |
| Low et al
| UK | DS | To show how the discourses around aging and old age play an implicit role in shaping the experiences of close persons caring for someone on conservative management | 26 | 83.7 (mean) | 63 (mean) | 58% | SP: 30%; CH: 53.8%; FM: 7.6% |
| Hoffman et al
| AU | DS | To gain a greater understanding of the experiences of conservatively managed patients and their carers/families | 11 | 84 (mean) | 69 (mean) | 64% | SP: 55%; CH:45% |
| Noble et al
| UK | DS | Explore the impact of being a family carer to patients with stage 5 chronic kidney disease managed without dialysis | 19 | NA | 20-30: 3 | 68% | SP: 21%; CH: 68% |
Note. RCT = randomized control trial; SP = spouse; SB = sibling; FM = family (other); CO = cohort study; NA = not available; CH = child or child-in-law; CS = cross-sectional study; DS = descriptive.
Results From Quantitative Studies.
| Study | Intervention/comparison | Mean score (control) | Mean score (comparator) | Conclusion |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chan et al
| Comprehensive psychosocial intervention | Baseline | Baseline | Enhanced psychosocial support led to an early and significant reduction in caregiver burden, as evidenced by lower ZBI and HADS anxiety scores at 1 and 3 months with insignificant reductions at 6 months. |
| Study | Mean score (conservative care) | Mean score (dialysis) | Conclusion | |
| De Biase et al
| BDI identified 1 case of depression among
caregivers | BDI identified 1 case of depression among
caregivers | Caregiving for conservatively managed patients was
associated with a negative effect on QOL especially in
physical role, vitality, and emotional role
scales—similar to HD patients but scoring better in
physical functioning (possibly explained by a younger
mean age). | |
| Shah et al
| CES = 80.91 (SD = 15.20) | CES = 64.39 (SD 16.75) | No significant difference in health-related QOL as assessed by the SF-6D between caregivers of dialysis and conservatively managed patients. Care-related QOL as measured by the CES score was lower for caregivers of patients on dialysis. Significantly lower mean CES scores were also noted for caregivers residing in the United Kingdom and for spouse/partner compared with children of care recipients. |
Note. ZBI = Zarit Burden Interview; HADS = Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale; BDI = Beck Depression Inventory; STAI-Y 1-2 = State Trait Anxiety Inventory; SF36 = Short-Form 36 Health Survey Questionnaire; CBI = Caregiver Burden Inventory; QOL = quality of life; HD = hemodialysis; CES = Carer Experience Scale; MQOL = McGill Quality of Life; SF-6D = Short-Form 6-Dimension.
Figure 2.Thematic synthesis of qualitative studies.