| Literature DB >> 35733174 |
George J Karambelas1,2,3, Kate Filia4,5, Linda K Byrne6, Kelly A Allott4,5, Anuradhi Jayasinghe6, Sue M Cotton4,5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Informal primary caregivers provide crucial supports to loved ones experiencing serious mental illnesses with profound outcomes for the caregivers themselves. A comprehensive understanding of how different serious mental illnesses change the caregiving experience may provide important insight into the ways in which caregivers can be better supported in their role. The aim of this review was to synthesize the comparative literature examining caregiver burden and psychological functioning (anxiety, depression, distress, and psychological wellbeing) between caregivers of people with schizophrenia spectrum disorders and bipolar disorder.Entities:
Keywords: Bipolar disorder; Caregiver; Caregiver burden; Mental health; Schizophrenia Spectrum disorders
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35733174 PMCID: PMC9219207 DOI: 10.1186/s12888-022-04069-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Psychiatry ISSN: 1471-244X Impact factor: 4.144
Fig. 1Flow Diagram of The Study Selection Process
Summary of twenty-eight studies included in this review
| Study ID and Authors | Country & Setting | Study Design | Caregiving domains measured | Key Findings | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Blanthorn-Hazell et al. [ | Germany, Spain & UK, community mental health | Cross-sectional | Burden | - Caring for those with either SCZ or BD with agitation confers substantial and similar burden. | |
| 2. Chadda et al. [ | India, psychiatric outpatient clinic | Prospective cohort | Burden | - Both caregiver groups experienced similar levels of burden, with no significant differences between caregiving groups. | |
| 3. Chakrabarti and Gill [ | India, psychiatric hospital | Cross-sectional | Burden | - Total burden scores were significantly greater for caregivers of those with SCZ than BD. | |
| 4. Chakrabarti et al. [ | India | Cross-sectional/ psychometric validation | Distress | Information not available | - There were no differences in distress between caregivers of those with SCZ and BD. |
| 5. Chang et al. [ | Taiwan, four hospitals | Cross-sectional | Burden, Depression, Anxiety | No total burden score available Depression Total Score Anxiety Total Score | - There were no significant differences in burden experienced between both caregiver groups. - No significant differences between groups on measures of depression and anxiety. |
| 6. Chien et al. [ | Hong Kong & China, two psychiatric outpatient clinics | Cross-sectional/ psychometric validation | Burden | - Level of family burden was not statistically significant between caregiver groups. | |
| 7. Fekih-Romdhane et al. [ | Tunisia, psychiatric hospital | Cross-sectional | Burden | - No significant differences in burden experienced between caregivers based on diagnosis. | |
| 8. Grover et al. [ | India, tertiary-care teaching hospital | Cross-sectional | Burden, Distress | Total Burden score Distress comparison data not available | - Overall negative caregiving experience was higher in SCZ group compared to BD. - Positive personal caregiver experience was significantly higher in caregivers of those with SCZ compared to BD. - No significant differences between caregivers on measure of psychological distress. |
| 9. Grover et al. [ | India, psychiatry outpatient clinic | Cross-sectional | Burden | Information not available | - Caregivers of those with SCZ had significantly higher moderate to severe objective burden compared to caregivers of those with BD. - Caregivers of those with BD has significantly higher subjective burden compared to caregivers of those with SCZ. |
| 10. Grover et al. [ | India, psychiatry hospital | Cross-sectional | Burden | Objective Burden Score Subjective Burden Score | - Caregivers in SCZ group had significantly higher objective burden, subjective burden, and disruption to routines. |
| 11. Grover et al. [ | India, 14 national mental health centres | Cross-sectional | Distress | - Caregivers of those with SCZ had significantly higher distress compared to caregivers of individuals with BD. | |
| 12. Ak et al. [ | Turkey, inpatient psychiatric unit | Cross-sectional | Burden | Information not available | - Caregiving burden was high across both groups, but no statistical difference was found. |
| 13. Nehra et al. [ | India, hospital | Cross-sectional | Burden | Total Objective Burden Score | - All differences were non-significant between the two groups. |
| 14. Ramírez et al. [ | Colombia, Mood Disorders and Psychosis Clinic | Randomized-controlled trial | Burden | Information not available | - When comparing scores between the BD and schizophrenia groups, no statistically significant differences were found. |
| 15. Rodrigo et al. [ | Sri Lanka, psychiatric hospital unit | Prospective cohort and cross-sectional | Burden, Depression | Information not available | - No significant differences between groups based on individual diagnosis were found on measures of burden and depression. |
| 16. Roychaudhuri et al. [ | Nigeria, psychiatric teaching hospital | Cross-sectional | Burden | Total Objective Burden Score Subjective Positive Appraisal Subjective Negative Appraisal | - Statistically significant differences between caregivers of those with SSD and BD were only observed in subjective negative burden domain. |
| 17. Sharma et al. [ | Nepal, psychiatric inpatient unit | Cross-sectional | Burden, Depression, Anxiety | Burden Total Score Depression Total Score Anxiety Total Score | - There were no statistically significant differences on burden, depression and anxiety based on individual diagnosis alone. - Spouses of individuals with SCZ had significantly higher stress levels than spouses of individuals with BD. |
| 18. Singh and Prajapati [ | Nepal, transit home | Cross-sectional | Burden | Information not available | - Moderate caregiving burden was statistically higher in caregivers of those with SCZ compared to caregivers of those with BD. |
| 19. Vasudeva et al. [ | India, tertiary care hospital | Cross-sectional | Burden | - Both caregiver groups experience considerable burden, but global burden in caregivers of those with SCZ was significantly higher than in BD group. | |
| 20. Webb et al. [ | USA, hospital inpatient and outpatient programs | Cross-sectional | Burden, Psychological wellbeing | Total Burden Score Total Wellbeing Score | - No significant differences related to diagnosis of individual were found. |
| 21. Zendjidjian et al. [ | France, psychiatric hospital unit | Cross-sectional | Mental Health | Mental Health Composite Score | - Caregivers of individuals with SCZ reported significantly lower mental health outcome scores compared to caregivers of those with BD. |
| 22. Zhou et al. [ | China, nine psychiatric units | Cross-sectional | Burden, Depression, Anxiety | Information not available | - Caregivers of those with BD reported greater burden, regarding violent and suicidal behaviours from individuals, compared to caregivers of those with SCZ. |
| 23. Abdeta and Desalegn [ | Ethiopia, university hospital | Cross-sectional | Presence of common mental disorders | Information not available | - No significant differences were noted in the percentage of caregivers presenting with common mental disorders (anxiety and depression). |
| 24. Cohen et al. [ | Brazil, outpatient teaching hospital | Cross-sectional | Mental health, Depression, Psychological outcomes | Mental Health Composite score Psychological Outcomes score Total Depression score | - Caregivers of individuals with SCZ had significantly higher depressive symptoms compared to caregivers of those BD. - No significant differences were observed on the mental health and psychological outcome scores between caregiver groups. |
| 25. Ukpong and Ibigbami [ | Nigeria, outpatient psychiatric clinics | Cross-sectional | Burden, Depression, Anxiety, Psychological outcomes | Total Burden score Total Anxiety score Total Depression score Total Psychological outcomes score | - Burden was significantly higher in caregivers of individuals with SCZ compared to caregivers of those with BD. - Caregivers did not significantly differ in anxiety experienced. - Caregivers of those with BD reported significantly higher depression scores than caregivers of those with SCZ. - Caregivers of those with SCZ reported significantly lower psychological outcome scores compared to caregivers of those with BD. |
| 26. Udoh et al. [ | Nigeria, neuropsychiatric hospital | Cross-sectional | Burden, Psychological Distress | Burden Total Score Psychological Distress Total Score | - No significant differences in caregiver burden were reported between caregivers of individuals with SCZ or BD. - Caregivers of individuals with SCZ reported higher levels of psychological distress compared to caregivers of those with BD. |
| 27. Asl et al. [ | Iran, university psychiatric institute | Descriptive analytical | Burden, Depression, Anxiety, Psychological distress | Total Burden Score Depression, Anxiety and Stress Composite Score | - No significant differences in caregiver burden were observed between caregivers of individuals with SCZ or BD. - No significant differences in depression, anxiety or distress were observed between caregivers of individuals with SCZ or BD. |
| 28. Khatoon et al. [ | India, psychiatric hospital | Cross-sectional | Burden | Total Objective Burden Score | - Caregivers of those with SCZ presented with significantly higher caregiver burden on subscales of total objective burden, subjective burden, financial burden, disruption to family activities, disruption to family leisure and disruption to family interaction. - There were no significant differences in caregiver burden observed between caregivers of individuals with SCZ or BD on the clinician-rated objective burden subscale, and burden subscales on effects on physical and mental health. |
SSD schizophrenia spectrum disorder, SCZ schizophrenia, BD bipolar disorder, M mean, SD standard deviation
Sample characteristics across twenty-eight studies included in this review
| Study ID and Authors | Age | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| SSD | Other | ||||
| 1. Blanthorn-Hazell et al. [ | 138(46.0%) | 159(54.0%) | N/A | Total | Total |
| 2. Chadda et al. [ | 100(50.0%) | 100(50.0%) | N/A | 75.0% between 25 and 50 years of age | SSD = 51(51.0%) BD = 42(42.0%) |
| 3. Chakrabarti and Gill [ | 20(34.5%) | 38(65.5%) | N/A | SSD = 48.7(10.7) BD = 39.2(9.3) | SSD = 12(60.0%) BD = 17(45.0%) Total |
| 4. Chakrabarti et al. [ | 20(50.0%) | 20(50.0%) | N/A | SSD = 44.7(13.1) BD = 41.7(12.9) Total | SSD = 8(40.0%) BD = 9(45.0%) Total |
| 5. Chang et al. [ | 215(46.8%) | 85(18.5%) | MDD: 159 (34.6%) | SSD = 55.0(13.5) BD = 51.4(12.6) MDD = 52.1(13.8) | SSD = 118(55.0%) BD = 43(51.0%) MDD = 74(47.0%) Total |
| 6. Chien et al. [ | 168(64.1%) | 12(4.6%) | Dep: 48 (18.3%) | Total | Total |
| 7. Fekih-Romdhane et al. [ | 20(38.5%) | 25(48.1%) | SCZAF: 7 (13.5%) | Total | Total |
| 8. Grover et al. [ | 70(50.0%) | 70(50.0%) | N/A | SSD = 49.9(11.8) BD = 42.6(13.8) | SSD = 21(33.3%) BD = 40(57.2%) Total |
| 9. Grover et al. [ | 65(53.3%) | 57(46.7%) | N/A | Total | Total |
| 10. Grover et al. [ | 50(50.0%) | 50(50.0%) | N/A | SSD = 50.3(14.9) BD = 45.0(13.2) | SSD = 15(30.0%) BD = 26(52.0%) Total |
| 11. Grover et al. [ | 707(50.4%) | 344(24.5%) | Dep: 352 (25.1%) | Total | Total |
| 12. Ak et al. [ | 40(50.0%) | 40(50.0%) | N/A | Not reported | SSD = 30(75.0%) BD = 25(62.5%) Total |
| 13. Nehra et al. [ | 50(50.0%) | 50(50.0%) | N/A | SSD = 43.50(9.8) BD = 40.1(11.4) | SSD = 23(46.0%) BD = 23(46.0%) Total |
| 14. Ramírez et al. [ | Not specified | Not specified | N/A | Not reported | Not reported |
| 15. Rodrigo et al. [ | 65(81.3%) | 15(18.7%) | N/A | Total | Total |
| 16. Roychaudhuri et al. [ | 30(55.5%) | 24(44.4%) | N/A | Reported as < 35 years = 24 (44.4%) > 35 years = 30 (55.6%) | Total |
| 17. Sharma et al. [ | 50(50.0%) | 50(50.0%) | N/A | Total | SSD = 23(46.0%) BD = 18(36.0%) Total |
| 18. Singh and Prajapati [ | 40(50.0%) | 40(50.0%) | N/A | SSD Carer females = 58.3(9.5) BD Carer females = 0.0(16.7) | SSD = 30(75.0%) BD = 20(50.0%) Total |
| 19. Vasudeva et al. [ | 52(50.5%) | 51(49.5%) | N/A | SSD = 48.3(11.7) BD = 47.4(12.0) | SSD = 20(38.5%) BD = 23(45.1%) Total |
| 20. Webb et al. [ | 59(70.2%) | 25(29.8%) | N/A | Total | Total |
| 21. Zendjidjian et al. [ | 246(51.5%) | 115(24%) | Dep: 117(24.5%) | BD & MDD Total = 52.2(15.5) | Total |
| 22. Zhou et al. [ | 243(54.9%) | 200(45.2%) | N/A | SSD = 47.7(13.7) BD = 44.4(13.6) | SSD = 107(44.0%) BD = 102(51.0%) Total |
| 23. Abdeta and Desalegn [ | 80(37.2%) | 60(27.9%) | Dep: 50(23.3%) Anx: 25(11.6%) | Total | Total |
| 24. Cohen et al. [ | 63(50.4%) | 62(49.6%) | N/A | SSD = 51.28(12.65) BD = 40.55(15.17) | SSD = 52(84.1%) BD = 43(69.4%) |
| 25. Ukpong and Ibigbami [ | 100(50%) | 100(50%) | N/A | SSD = 56.13(12.99) BD = 43.03(13.06) | SSD = 63(63%) BD = 52(52%) |
| 26. Udoh et al. [ | 84(20.2%) | 46(11.1%) | Dep: 104(25.1%) SUD: 92(22.2%) Others: 89(21.4%) | 15–29 years = 181 (43.6%) 30–44 years = 154 (37.1%) 45–59 years = 63(15.2%) Above 60 years = 17(4.1%) | Total female = 236(56.9%) |
| 27. Asl et al. [ | 150(33.33%) | 150(33.33%) | ASD: 150(33.33%) | SSD = 42.22(1.28) BD = 48.41(1.37) | SSD = 81(54%) BD = 87(58%) |
| 28. Khatoon et al. [ | 30(50.0%) | 30(50.0%) | N/A | 20–30 years = 16(26.6%) 30–40 years = 34(56.6%) 40–50 years = 10(16.6%) | Not reported |
SSD Schizophrenia Spectrum Disorders, BD Bipolar Disorder, SCZAF Schizoaffective Disorder, Dep Depression, Anx Anxiety, SUD Substance Use Disorders, ASD Autism Spectrum Disorder, M Mean, SD Standard Deviation, N/n Number of participants
Measures used across twenty-eight studies to assess caregiver burden and psychological functioning
| Name of measure | How construct is defined | How construct is assessed by measure | Studies used in |
|---|---|---|---|
| Burden | |||
| Involvement Evaluation Questionnaire (IEQ [ | Stress-appraisal-coping model | 29-items across four factors: tension, supervision, worrying and urging. A total score represents overall burden. | 1, 9, 10 |
| Burden Assessment Schedule (BAS [ | Objective and subjective burden | 40-items across nine factors: spouse (caregiver related), physical & mental health of caregivers, external support, caregiver’s routine, support of individual, taking responsibility, other relations, individual’s behaviour, and caregiver strategy. A total score represents overall burden. | 2, 3, 19 |
| Caregiving Burden Inventory (CBI [ | Burden defined through the five factors assessed | 24-items across five factors: time-dependent; developmental; physical; social and emotional. | 5 |
| Family Burden Interview Schedule (FBIS [ | Objective burden with a subjective burden question included. | 24-items across six factors: financial burden, disruption of family routine, disruption of family leisure, disruption of family interactions, effect on physical health and mental health of relatives. One additional item assessing subjective burden. Two total scores representing objective and subjective burden. Clinician-rated. | 6, 9, 10, 13, 16, 18, 25, 28 |
| Subjective Well-being Inventory (SUBI [ | Subjective burden | Two sets of items assessing positive and negative assessments of well-being and subjective burden. Two total scores for positive and negative sets. | 16 |
| Zarit Burden Interview (ZBI [ | Subjective burden | 12-items assessing caregiver’s state of health, psychological and financial wellbeing, social life, and relationship with the individual. A total score represents overall subjective burden. | 7, 12, 26, 27 |
| Modified Caregiver Strain Index (MCSI [ | Caregiver strain | 13-items across six factors: social, psychological, physical, time, financial and employment. Higher scores indicate greater caregiver strain. | 15, 17 |
| Experience of Caregiving Inventory (ECI [ | Stress-appraisal-coping model | 66-items across ten factors: eight negative aspects of caregiving (difficult behaviours, negative symptoms, stigma, problems with services, effects on family, need for back-up, dependency, and loss) and two positive aspects of caregiving (positive personal experience and good aspects of relationship). Three total scores represent overall negative score, overall positive score, and global score. | 8 |
| Family Burden Schedule (adaptation of the Spanish adaptation of the Social Behaviour Assessment Schedule) (FBS [ | Objective burden, attribution level and subjective burden. | Number of items not specified. Assesses burden across three factors: objective burden evaluates change in daily functioning; level of attribution evaluates whether caregivers consider their problems related to the individual; subjective burden evaluates perception of stress related to subject’s behaviour. | 14 |
| Significant Other Scale (based on subscale of Family Evaluation Form) [ | Objective burden | 37-item measure, with the study using a 13-item subscale described by the original measure authors as assessing objective burden. One total score representing overall burden. | 20 |
| Name of measure | How construct is defined | How construct is assessed by measure | Studies used in |
| Family Experience Inventory Schedule (FEIS [ | Family burden + Depression and anxiety | 28-items across five factors: violent behaviour, depression and anxiety symptoms and social isolation of the caregiver, disruption of caregiver routines, individual suicidality, and satisfaction with the quality-of-service provision. | 22 |
| Psychological Functioning | |||
| Distressing Symptom Rating Scale (DSRS [ | Caregiver distress | 44-items across 16 factors: depressive/negative, manic, socially disruptive, somatic, delusions/odd beliefs, hallucinations, cognitive, aggression, work, self-care, dependence, compliance, side effects, substance abuse, insight, poor rapport, and other. | 4 |
| Taiwanese Depression Questionnaire (TDQ [ | Presence and severity of depression | 18-items evaluating depressive symptoms over past week, calculated to obtain total depression score. | 5 |
| Beck Anxiety Inventory (BAI [ | Presence and severity of anxiety | 21-items summed to obtain total anxiety score. | 5, 17 |
| General Health Questionnaire (GHQ [ | Psychological morbidity/distress | 12-items summed up obtain total score assessing psychological distress/morbidity. | 8, 11, 26 |
| Center for Epidemiological Studies – Depression Scale (CES-D [ | Possibility of depression | 20-items with one total score representing overall depression. | 15 |
| Beck Depression Inventory (BDI [ | Presence and severity of depression | 21-items with one total score representing depression. | 17, 24 |
| National Center for Health Statistics General Wellbeing-Schedule (from the Medical History Questionnaire) [ | Wellbeing | 22-items across six factors of caregiver wellbeing: anxiety, depression, general health, positive wellbeing, vitality, self-control. | 20 |
| Family Experience Inventory Schedule (FEIS [ | Family burden + Depression and anxiety | 28-items across five factors: violent behaviour, depression/anxiety symptoms and social isolation of the caregiver, disruption of caregiver routines, individual suicidality, and satisfaction with the quality-of-service provision. | 22 |
| Self-Reported Questionnaire-20 (SRQ-20 [ | Presence of common mental disorders (anxiety and depression) | 20-item screening tool with one total score designed to assess the presence of symptoms of common mental disorders, such as anxiety and depression. | 23 |
| Short Form-36 (SF-36 [ | Quality of life (including mental health outcomes) | 36-items across eight factors: physical functioning, social functioning, role-physical problems, role-emotional problems, mental health, vitality, bodily pain, and general health. Two component summary scores representing physical and mental overall score. | 21, 24 |
World Health Organization Quality of Life Instrument – BREF (WHOQOL-BREF [ | Quality of life (including psychological outcomes domain) | 26-items divided into four domains: physical, psychological, social relationships and environment, along with two general questions of quality of life. Total scores range from 0 to 100 and the higher the value of scores, the higher quality of life. | 24, 25 |
| Hospital Anxiety and Depression Inventory (HADS [ | Anxiety and depression | 14-item measure of anxiety and depressive symptom severity. One total score is calculated with higher scores representing greater symptom severity. | 25 |
| Depression, Anxiety and Stress Scale (DASS [ | Depression, anxiety, and stress | 42-item measure of three 14-item subscales of depression, anxiety, and stress. Three total scores representing each domain are calculated measured from mild to severe severity. | 27 |