Informal carers' health-related quality of life and patient experience in primary care: Evidence from 195,364 carers in England responding to a national survey

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Abstract

Background: We aim to describe the health-related quality of life of informal carers and their experiences of primary care. Methods: Responses from the 2011-12 English General Practice Patient Survey, including 195,364 informal carers, were analysed using mixed effect logistic regressions controlling for age, gender, ethnicity and social deprivation to describe carer health-related quality of life (mobility, self-care, usual activities, pain, and anxiety/depression, measured using EQ-5D) and primary care experience (access, continuity and communication). Results: Informal carers reported poorer health-related quality of life than non-carers of similar age, gender, ethnicity and social deprivation. Increasing caring commitment was associated with worse EQ-5D scores, with carers of 50+ hours a week scoring 0.05 points lower than non-carers (95 % CI 0.05 to 0.04), equivalent to 18 fewer days of full health annually. Considering each domain of EQ-5D separately, carers of 50+ hours/week were more likely to report pain OR∈=∈1.53 (1.50-1.57), p∈

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Thomas, G. P. A., Saunders, C. L., Roland, M. O., & Paddison, C. A. M. (2015). Informal carers’ health-related quality of life and patient experience in primary care: Evidence from 195,364 carers in England responding to a national survey. BMC Family Practice, 16(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/s12875-015-0277-y

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