Abstract
Objective: caregiver effects of geriatric care models focusing primarily at the patient have not been consistently studied. We studied caregiver effects of a nurse-led comprehensive geriatric evaluation and management (GEM) programme for community-dwelling frail older people that showed - in a randomised comparison with usual care - health-related quality of life benefits for the care receivers. Methods: this randomised trial included 110 caregiver/patient dyads who were followed up for 6 months. Primary analyses were intention-to-treat analyses of caregiver burden assessed with Zarit Burden Interview (ZBI; 0-88; higher means more burden). Preplanned subgroup analyses were conducted for cognition, living arrangement and patient/caregiver co-residence. Results: overall, perceived caregiver burden showed no significant differences between study groups in changes over time. However, perceived burden was at baseline more than eight points higher in caregivers sharing a household with patients (n = 23) compared to caregivers living separately (n = 87). The intervention performed better in caregivers living together with the patient than in caregivers living separately (P for interaction = 0.04). Co-resident caregivers experienced six-Zarit point improvement compared with four-point deterioration in the non-co-resident caregivers. Conclusions: GEM at home benefited patients, but maybe not caregivers. Caregiver effects are related to whether caregivers live with the patient or not. © The Author 2009. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the British Geriatrics Society. All rights reserved.
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Melis, R. J. F., van Eijken, M. I. J., van Achterberg, T., Teerenstra, S., Vernooij-Dassen, M. J. F. J., van de Lisdonk, E. H., & Rikkert, M. G. M. O. (2009). The effect on caregiver burden of a problem-based home visiting programme for frail older people. Age and Ageing, 38(5), 542–547. https://doi.org/10.1093/ageing/afp101
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