Abstract

Emotional distress (depression, anxiety, and PTS) and unhealthy lifestyle factors (e.g., smoking, alcohol consumption, poor diet, limited physical activity, medication adherence) are common in hemorrhagic stroke (HS) survivors and may increase risk for recurrence, morbidity, and mortality. Emotional distress and unhealthy lifestyle factors tend to be interdependent between survivors and their informal caregivers (e.g., family and friends who provide unpaid care; together called dyads), such that one partner's lifestyle and coping behaviors influence the other's behaviors, yet no research has closely examined this relationship in HS dyads over time. We will conduct a mixed methods study to quantitatively and qualitatively understand the longitudinal relationship between emotional distress and lifestyle factors across time in this population (HS dyads) to identify treatment targets to prevent emotional distress chronicity and stroke recurrence. In aim 1, we will assess emotional distress (i.e., depression, anxiety, and PTS) and lifestyle factors (smoking, alcohol consumption, poor diet, limited physical activity medication adherence/blood pressure control) in dyads of survivors of HS and their caregivers (N = 80), at three separate time points (hospitalization in the Neuro-ICU, 1, and 3 months later). We hypothesize that 1) lifestyle factors and emotional distress will be interrelated within and across time for both survivors and caregivers, and 2) lifestyle factors and emotional distress will be interdependent between survivors and caregivers. We also aim to explore the nuanced interplay between lifestyle factors and emotional distress and gain in depth information on barriers and facilitators for a dyadic intervention to optimize lifestyle behaviors and emotional functioning in HS dyads. Eligible patients will be adults who have a caregiver also willing to participate. Patients will be referred for study participation by the nursing team who will ensure that they are cognitively able to meaningfully participate. Multilevel dyadic modeling (i.e., actor-partner interdependence model; APIM) with distinguishable dyads will be used to determine influences of these factors onto each other over time. In Aim 2, we will conduct live video qualitative dyadic interviews (N = 20 or until theme saturation) at all time points from the same participants with and without emotional distress and at least one lifestyle risk factor, to understand the nuanced relationships between emotional distress and lifestyle behaviors, and barriers and facilitators to engagement in a skills-based psychosocial intervention. Interviews will be analyzed using inductive and deductive approaches. The present study is currently ongoing. So far, we enrolled 2 participants. Recruitment will end October 2022 with plans to analyze data by December 2022. The findings from this study will be used to further develop psychosocial interventions and inform novel treatments for survivors of HS and their informal caregivers.

Highlights

  • Hemorrhagic strokes (HS) account for less than a quarter of all strokes yet are some of the deadliest and most debilitating forms of cerebrovascular disease [1]

  • We aim to have data analyses completed by December 2022 and to inform future adaptations of our dyadic resiliency trial specific to HS, emotional distress, and lifestyle factors

  • To our knowledge, there has been no research on the longitudinal interplay between lifestyle behaviors and emotional distress amongst dyads after HS

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Summary

Introduction

Hemorrhagic strokes (HS) account for less than a quarter of all strokes yet are some of the deadliest and most debilitating forms of cerebrovascular disease [1]. Our previous studies demonstrate the benefits of a dyadic approach in an acute neurological illness population for emotional distress [23,24,25, 28,29,30], there have been no studies incorporating lifestyle and emotional distress factors simultaneously in one treatment modality, nor prospective data which links these two modifiable domains to a conceptual model for treatment targets in HS dyads. Current psychosocial interventions with neurological disorders are typically focused either on survivor or caregiver outcomes and are not sensitive to the specific needs of HS dyads, which usually include greater physical and psychosocial sequelae, symptom burden, higher recurrence risk, and substantial disability, morbidity, and mortality

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