Social worlds of Appalachian women caregivers of older relatives living with dementia.

IF 2.3 Q2 OBSTETRICS & GYNECOLOGY Frontiers in global women's health Pub Date : 2024-12-05 eCollection Date: 2024-01-01 DOI:10.3389/fgwh.2024.1461626
Brandy Renee McCann, Karen A Roberto, J Savla, Rosemary Blieszner
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Abstract

Rationale: Over 11 million people in the United States provide care for an older family member with dementia, with this responsibility primarily falling on daughters and wives. In Appalachia, a mountainous region in the U.S characterized by close families, family members were crucial to ensuring that care needs were met for people living with dementia during the COVID-19 pandemic. However, we know little about the well-being of family caregivers during the public health crisis. Guided by a Limited Future Time Perspective postulate, which posits that as people age they begin to prioritize emotionally meaningful relationships over instrumental goals, we asked how dementia caregiving changes the social lives of family caregivers situated within kin networks; and how a public health crisis (i.e., COVID-19 pandemic) affects caregivers who are already at risk for social isolation and feelings of loneliness.

Methods: Participants were recruited from a regional health care system and four Area Agencies on Aging. In our longitudinal study we invited family caregivers to be interviewed at multiple time points over a 4-year period. The sample for this study was women caregivers interviewed (N = 27; age range 32-81, m = 63). Interviewers followed a semi-structured protocol with questions designed to elicit descriptions about (a) changes in formal and informal support over time, (b) the person living with dementia's symptoms and disease progression, and (c) how the pandemic affected caregivers' and persons living with dementia's social worlds.

Findings: We found three types of caregivers: (1) caregivers who had social lives interdependent with their relative with dementia, (2) caregivers and persons living with dementia whose social lives were restricted due to dementia symptoms and caregiving demands, and (3) caregivers and their relative living with dementia who maintained separate social lives. Dementia symptoms more than social distancing measures contributed to caregivers' shrinking social worlds particularly for those with interdependent social lives despite living amongst kin.

Conclusions: This study is important in understanding how women in Appalachia fared during a pandemic in the context of dementia caregiving. This research supports the need for respite services and dementia care training for respite workers.

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阿巴拉契亚女性痴呆症老年亲属照顾者的社会世界。
理由:在美国,有超过1100万人照顾患有痴呆症的老年家庭成员,而这一责任主要落在女儿和妻子身上。在美国阿巴拉契亚山区,家庭关系密切,在2019冠状病毒病大流行期间,家庭成员对于确保痴呆症患者的护理需求得到满足至关重要。然而,在公共卫生危机期间,我们对家庭照顾者的福祉知之甚少。在有限未来时间视角假设的指导下,该假设认为,随着年龄的增长,人们开始优先考虑情感上有意义的关系,而不是工具目标,我们询问痴呆症护理如何改变亲属网络中家庭照顾者的社会生活;以及公共卫生危机(即COVID-19大流行)如何影响已经面临社会孤立和孤独感风险的护理人员。方法:参与者从一个地区卫生保健系统和四个地区老龄化机构招募。在我们的纵向研究中,我们邀请家庭照顾者在4年期间的多个时间点接受采访。本研究的样本为受访的女性照顾者(N = 27;年龄32 ~ 81岁,m = 63)。采访者遵循一种半结构化的方案,其中的问题旨在引起以下方面的描述:(a)随着时间的推移,正式和非正式支持的变化,(b)痴呆症患者的症状和疾病进展,以及(c)大流行如何影响照顾者和痴呆症患者的社交世界。研究结果:我们发现了三种类型的照顾者:(1)与痴呆症患者亲属的社交生活相互依赖的照顾者;(2)与痴呆症患者的社交生活因痴呆症症状和照顾需求而受到限制的照顾者;(3)与痴呆症患者亲属保持独立的社交生活的照顾者。痴呆症症状比社交距离措施更能导致看护者的社交世界缩小,尤其是那些尽管生活在亲属之间,但社交生活相互依赖的人。结论:这项研究对于了解阿巴拉契亚地区妇女在痴呆症护理大流行期间的表现非常重要。这项研究支持了对暂托服务和暂托工作者的痴呆症护理培训的需求。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.70
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0.00%
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审稿时长
13 weeks
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