Abstract
Background Most patients with heart failure find self-care difficult to perform and rely on family caregivers for support. Informal caregivers, however, often face insufficient psychological preparation and challenges in providing long-term care. Insufficient caregiver preparedness not only results in psychological burden for the informal caregivers but may also lead to a decline in caregiver contributions to patient self-care that affects patient outcomes. Objective Our objective was to test (1) the association of baseline informal caregivers' preparedness with psychological symptoms (anxiety and depression) and quality of life 3 months after baseline among patients with insufficient self-care and (2) the mediating effects of caregivers' contributions to self-care of heart failure (CC-SCHF) on the relationship of caregivers' preparedness with patients' outcomes at 3 months. Methods A longitudinal design was used to collect data between September 2020 and January 2022 in China. Data analyses were conducted using descriptive statistics, correlations, and linear mixed models. We used model 4 of the PROCESS program in SPSS with bootstrap testing to evaluate the mediating effect of CC-SCHF of informal caregivers' preparedness at baseline with psychological symptoms or quality of life among patients with HF 3 months later. Results Caregiver preparedness was positively associated with CC-SCHF maintenance (r = 0.685, P
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Su, Y., Cheng, M., Zhu, C., Ge, Y., Ke, Y., Shi, Y., … Hou, Y. (2023). The Influence of Informal Caregivers’ Preparedness on Psychological Symptoms and Quality of Life Among Patients With Heart Failure And Insufficient Self-care. Journal of Cardiovascular Nursing, 38(3), 224–236. https://doi.org/10.1097/JCN.0000000000000975
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