|
TUSCALOOSA, Ala. – Individual characteristics of
caregivers, including race and relationships, should be
considered while helping them manage stress and burden,
according to a soon-to-be published study from researchers at
The University of Alabama and The University of Alabama at
Birmingham.
The study, headed by Dr. Louis Burgio, professor of
psychology and co-director of UA’s Center for Mental Health
and Aging, and Dr. Alan Stevens, associate professor of
gerontology and geriatric medicine at UAB, found significant
differences in the preferences of black and white caregivers of
dementia patients, in relation to the type of assistance they
prefer.
“Whites responded best to minimal support conditions, such
as informative mail-outs and periodic phone calls, while blacks
responded best to in-home skills training and formal
workshops,” Burgio said. He said the relationship of the
caregivers also mattered. “We found that husbands responded
best to minimal support while the wives responded best to skills
training,” he said.
Results from the study will be published in the August issue
of “The Gerontologist,” the premier scientific journal
dealing with aging issues. The study tracked two types of
caregiver interventions and found that both eased the pressures
facing caregivers.
One of the interventions was an intensive skills training
program, involving a group workshop and 16 in-home treatment
sessions. Trained therapists taught caregivers how to handle
problem behaviors from the patient and taught caregivers problem
solving skills. The second intervention provided caregivers with
written materials to help them identify problem areas and
provided periodic “check-in” phone calls.
“We found that both interventions helped reduce the number
of problem behaviors,” Stevens said. “Additionally, the
caregivers reported they were better able to handle the burden
associated with problem behaviors that did arise.”
Alabama was one of six intervention sites in the nation selected
for REACH, a six-year study by the National Institute of Nursing
Research (NINR) and the National Institute of Aging (NIA), two
components of the National Institutes of Health. REACH, or
Resources for Enhancing Alzheimer Caregivers’ Health, was
funded to develop and test new ways for dementia caregivers to
manage the stress and burden of helping their loved ones.
“The responsibilities and burdens of caregivers of patients
with Alzheimer's disease create a demand for research such as
this,” said Dr. Patricia Grady, director of NINR. “It is
important for health care providers to identify ethnically and
culturally sensitive interventions to achieve the best results,
and this study is an important step in that direction.”
In Alabama, approximately 59,000 individuals suffer from
Alzheimer’s disease and other dementia disorders, with three
out of four of these people cared for at home, usually by family
members. Forty percent of Alzheimer’s caregivers die from
stress-related disorders before the Alzheimer’s patient.
“What REACH is telling us is that we can help dementia
caregivers, but we need to go to the next level,” Burgio said.
“Now that we know what works, we need to modify the
interventions based on the caregivers’ personal
characteristics. We have to tailor the interventions to the
individual caregivers.”
The study, co-authored by UAB’s Delois Guy and Dr. David
Roth and the University of South Florida’s Dr. William Haley,
suggests the racial differences might be related to two factors.
It is possible that black caregivers responded better to the
therapeutic relationship that develops during one-on-one
interactions in the home, Burgio said. Previous studies show,
when given the option, blacks usually choose more active medical
and psychosocial interventions. This is likely related to the
long history of blacks being “shortchanged” by the health
delivery systems, he said.
A second study, also funded by NINR and the NIA, is now
underway. UA’s Center for Mental Health and Aging and
department of psychology were earlier awarded $1.2 million to
participate in REACH II. This study, in which Burgio is the
principal investigator, is a collaborative effort with the
Center for Aging at UAB, with Stevens serving as the principal
investigator of the UAB subcontract. Co-investigators in the
Alabama portion of the study include Dr. Michael Hardin, a
statistician at UA and Dr. Linda Davis, a nurse researcher at
UAB.
Researchers are now recruiting black and white caregivers
from the Tuscaloosa and Birmingham areas. Each participant is
assigned, by chance, to one of two groups. Each group will be
offered similar information but at different times and delivered
in different ways. One group will receive their information
during home visits by a member of the research team who will
also teach the caregiver specific skills for reducing stress and
burden. Additionally, this group will be given a screen-phone
system that has the capability of allowing the user to access
additional information from the research team and to participate
in support groups from home.
The other group will receive their educational information
through the mail and during a caregiving workshop.
Cost-effectiveness of the intervention for the caregiver will be
evaluated as part of the study. The program is free to all
participants. Area Alzheimer’s caregivers interested in
finding out more, or in participating, may call UA at
1-800-361-3196.
|