Abstract

ObjectiveTo examine the system of connections among traumatic brain injury (TBI) patient social functioning, family functioning, and caregiver depression and burden in Mexico. DesignCross-sectional survey. SettingA public medical facility. ParticipantsMexican TBI patient-caregiver dyads (N=84) participated in this study. Most of the patients with TBI were men (81%), with an average age ± SD of 38.83±13.44 years. The majority of caregivers (86%) were women, with an average age ± SD of 51.74±11.29. InterventionNot applicable. Main Outcome MeasuresOutcomes assessed included family functioning (Family Satisfaction Scale), patient social functioning (Medical Outcomes Study 36-Item Short-Form Health Survey), and caregiver mental health (Patient Health Questionnaire-9 and Zarit Burden Interview). ResultsA moderated mediation path model found that patient social functioning and family functioning predicted caregiver burden, and caregiver burden mediated the effect of family functioning on caregiver depression. Caregivers with strong family functioning tended to have low burden, no matter the level of patient social functioning. This path model provided an excellent fit and explained 47% of the variance in caregiver burden and 36% of the variance in caregiver depression. ConclusionsIn Mexico, strong family functioning is an important buffer in the relationship between TBI patient social functioning deficits and caregiver mental health, especially because familism is a core value in Latino culture. Rehabilitation interventions designed to strengthen family functioning may improve caregiver mental health, thereby influencing the quality of informal care that caregivers are able to provide.

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