Longitudinal study of the mental health of caregivers caring for elderly patients with dementia: Effect of institutional placement on mental health

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Abstract

One hundred and three family caregivers of relatives with dementia were longitudinally surveyed to examine the course of caregivers' mental health after the relatives had been placed in full-time care facilities. Mental health was assessed twice, with a 6-month interval, using the Japanese version of the 60-item General Health Questionnaire. The degree of social dysfunction was significantly reduced within 6 months after placement, while the other indicators of mental health (e.g. anxiety-insomnia, depression, somatic symptom and psychiatric morbidity) were not reduced within this term. However, anxiety-insomnia and psychiatric morbidity were significantly reduced more than 6 months after placement. Analyses by caregivers' lineal relations to the relatives indicated that only daughters-in-law showed a significant decrease in anxiety-insomnia and a marginal reduction in psychiatric morbidity. This study suggests that caregivers' social dysfunction was more greatly reduced than anxiety-insomnia and psychiatric morbidity within a relatively short term after placement, and that its effects on mental health might vary with the lineal relations.

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Matsuda, O., Hasebe, N., Ikehara, K., Futatsuya, M., & Akahane, N. (1997). Longitudinal study of the mental health of caregivers caring for elderly patients with dementia: Effect of institutional placement on mental health. Psychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences, 51(5), 289–293. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1440-1819.1997.tb03200.x

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