"我已经这样做了很多年":COVID-19 大流行与家庭照顾者的孤立和孤独。

IF 3.3 Q2 GERIATRICS & GERONTOLOGY Frontiers in aging Pub Date : 2024-05-31 eCollection Date: 2024-01-01 DOI:10.3389/fragi.2024.1376103
Caitlin Sullivan, Judith B Vick, Kasey Decosimo, Janet Grubber, Cynthia J Coffman, Rebecca Bruening, Nina Sperber, Matthew Tucker, Joshua Dadolf, Nathan Boucher, Virginia Wang, Kelli D Allen, S Nicole Hastings, Courtney H Van Houtven, Megan Shepherd-Banigan
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:家庭照护者是受照护者的家人或朋友,他们协助受照护者进行日常生活活动、药物管理、交通和财务帮助等活动。由于需要照顾他人,家庭照顾者通常被认为是有可能承受更多压力、孤独和寂寞的人群。在美国 COVID-19 大流行期间,社会隔离和社交活动减少是老年人及其家庭照顾者最关心的问题。方法:在 COVID-19 大流行之前和期间,我们对 422 名退伍军人的家庭照顾者进行了健康和福利调查。使用加州大学洛杉矶分校(UCLA)的三项目孤独感测量法,通过逻辑回归模型研究了护理人员群体在 COVID-19 之前和期间的孤独感是否存在差异。对开放式调查问题进行了快速定向定性内容分析,以探讨 COVID-19 大流行对调查回答的影响:结果:COVID-19 流行前与流行期间,护理人员的孤独感没有明显差异。在有关 COVID-19 影响的开放式回答中,护理人员描述了他们所经历的孤独感和社会隔离;为什么他们没有受到大流行病的影响;以及护理工作如何使他们具备了应对策略来处理与大流行病相关的负面影响:结论:COVID-19 前与 COVID-19 期间的护理人员在孤独感方面没有明显差异。未来的研究可以评估具有适应能力的护理人员的具体特征,并确定哪些护理人员更容易体验到孤独感。了解护理人员的孤独感有助于其他医疗系统制定和实施护理人员支持干预措施。
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"I've been doing this for years": the COVID-19 pandemic and family caregiver isolation and loneliness.

Background: Family caregivers are family members or friends of care recipients who assist with activities of daily living, medication management, transportation, and help with finances among other activities. As a result of their caregiving, family caregivers are often considered a population at risk of experiencing increased stress, isolation, and loneliness. During the COVID-19 pandemic in the US, social isolation and decrease in social activities were a top concern among older adults and their family caregivers. Using secondary analysis of survey data as part of a multi-site implementation trial of a caregiver skills training program, we describe differences in caregiver experiences of loneliness before and during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Methods: Health and wellbeing surveys of family caregivers were collected on 422 family caregivers of veterans before and during COVID-19. Logistic regression modeling examined whether the loneliness differed between caregiver groups pre vs during COVID-19, using the UCLA 3-item loneliness measure. Rapid directed qualitative content analysis of open-ended survey questions was used to explore the context of how survey responses were affected by the COVID-19 pandemic.

Results: There were no significant differences in loneliness between caregivers pre vs during COVID-19. In open-ended responses regarding effects of COVID-19, caregivers described experiencing loneliness and social isolation; why they were unaffected by the pandemic; and how caregiving equipped them with coping strategies to manage negative pandemic-related effects.

Conclusion: Loneliness did not differ significantly between pre vs during COVID-19 caregivers. Future research could assess what specific characteristics are associated with caregivers who have resiliency, and identify caregivers who are more susceptible to experiencing loneliness. Understanding caregiver loneliness could assist other healthcare systems in developing and implementing caregiver support interventions.

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