Abstract

ObjectivesDementia affects many people, with numbers expected to grow as populations age. Many people with dementia receive informal/family/unpaid care, for example, from a spouse or child, which may affect carer quality of life. Measuring the effectiveness of health/social care interventions for carers requires a value measure of the quality-of-life impact of caring. This motivated development of the Scales Measuring the Impact of Dementia on Carers-D (SIDECAR-D) instrument. This study aimed to obtain general population values for SIDECAR-D to aid incorporating the impact of caring in economic evaluation.MethodsMembers of the UK general public completed a best–worst scaling object case survey, which included the 18 SIDECAR-D items and EQ-5D-3L descriptions. Responses were analyzed using scale-adjusted finite mixture models. Relative importance scores (RISs) for the 18 SIDECAR-D items formed the SIDECAR-D relative scale measuring the relative impact of caring. The SIDECAR-D tariff, on the full health = 1, dead = 0 scale, was derived by rescaling EQ-5D-3L and SIDECAR-D RISs so the EQ-5D-3L RISs equaled anchored valuations of the EQ-5D-3L pits state from a visual analog scale task.ResultsFive hundred ten respondents completed the survey. The model had 2 parameter and 3 scale classes. Additive utility decrements of SIDECAR-D items ranged from –0.05 to –0.162. Utility scores range from 0.95 for someone affirming 1 item to –0.297 for someone affirming all 18.ConclusionSIDECAR-D is a needs-based scale of the impact on quality of life of caring for someone with dementia, with a valuation tariff to support its use in economic evaluation.

Highlights

  • Dementia is a syndrome linked to a range of progressive brain diseases causing gradual decline in mental abilities and increasing functional difficulties

  • This study aimed to obtain general population values for SIDECAR-D to aid incorporating the impact of caring in economic evaluation

  • SIDECAR-D is a needs-based scale of the impact on quality of life of caring for someone with dementia, with a valuation tariff to support its use in economic evaluation

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Summary

Introduction

Dementia is a syndrome linked to a range of progressive brain diseases causing gradual decline in mental abilities and increasing functional difficulties. Being a caregiver can place a large burden on people in time and resources, disruption to daily life, and psychological effects.[1]. Dementia mainly affects those aged over 65, and increased life expectancy means that globally the number of people diagnosed is expected to rise from 47 million in 2015 to 3 times that by 2050.2 As the number of people with dementia increases, so too does the societal burden, meaning greater need for support and services targeting people with dementia and their carers. By carer we refer to any person providing care for someone with dementia who is not formally employed to do so This definition encompasses the terms informal carer, family carer, and unpaid carer used elsewhere

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