Abstract

BackgroundMaking health-related decisions about loved ones with cognitive impairment may contribute to caregiver burden of care. We sought to explore factors associated with burden of care among informal caregivers who had made housing decisions on behalf of a cognitively impaired older person.MethodsWe conducted a secondary analysis within a cluster randomized trial (cRT) conducted in 16 publicly-funded home care service points across the Province of Quebec. The cRT assessed the impact of training home care teams in interprofessional shared decision making (IP-SDM). We assessed burden of care with the Zarit Burden Interview (ZBI) scale. We adapted Pallett’s framework to inform our data analysis. This framework posits that factors influencing burden of care among caregivers fall within four domains: (a) characteristics of the caregiver, (b) characteristics of the cognitively impaired older person, (c) characteristics of the relationship between the caregiver and the cognitively impaired older person, and (d) the caregiver’s perception of their social support resources. We computed the ZBI score and performed multilevel linear regression modelling.ResultsAmong 296 caregivers included in the dataset, the mean ZBI score was 29.8 (SD = 17.5) out of 88. The typical participant was 62.6 years old (SD = 11.7), female (74.7%), and caring for a mother or father (61.2%). Using multivariate analysis, factors significantly associated with caregiver burden mapped onto: caregiver characteristics (caregivers with higher burden were female, experienced higher decision regret and decisional conflict, preferred that their loved one move into the caregiver’s home, into a private nursing home or a mixed private-public nursing home, and had made the decision more recently); relationship characteristics (spouses and children experienced higher burden); and caregiver’s perception of social support resources (caregivers who perceived that a joint decision making process had occurred had higher burden).ConclusionIn line with the proposed framework used, we found that caregiver characteristics, relationship characteristics and caregiver’s perception of social support resources were associated with burden of care. Our results will help design interventions to prevent and/or reduce caregivers’ burden of care.Trial registrationNCT02244359. Date of registration: September 18, 2014.

Highlights

  • Making health-related decisions about loved ones with cognitive impairment may contribute to caregiver burden of care

  • This cluster randomized trial (cRT) assessed the impact of training home-care teams based in community health and social services centres (HSSCs) in interprofessional shared decision making (IP-Shared decision making (SDM)) on the role that caregivers assume in the decisionmaking process regarding housing for a cognitively impaired older person

  • We found that burden of care in caregivers who had made housing decisions on behalf of a cognitively impaired older person was higher if caregivers were female, experienced higher decision regret and decisional conflict, and were caring for a parent

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Summary

Introduction

Making health-related decisions about loved ones with cognitive impairment may contribute to caregiver burden of care. When the older person is cognitively impaired, formal caregivers (e.g. home care personnel) and/ or informal caregivers (e.g. a family member) are often involved in decision-making about their health [8, 9]. These informal caregivers have a crucial role in ensuring the quality of life of cognitively impaired older people and in decisions related to their health. This role may entail financial burden, social isolation, and physical and/or mental health problems, referred to as “burden of care” [10]

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