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Journal Article

Citation

Harding R, Gao W, Jackson D, Pearson C, Murray J, Higginson IJ. J. Pain Symptom Manage. 2015; 50(4): 445-452.

Affiliation

Department of Palliative Care, Policy and Rehabilitation, Cicely Saunders Institute, London, United Kingdom.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2015, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.jpainsymman.2015.04.005

PMID

25912274

Abstract

CONTEXT: Measurement and improvement of informal caregiver burden are central aims of policy and intervention. Burden itself is a complex construct and total burden can differ by patient diagnosis, although how diagnosis affects different aspects of caregiver subjective burden is unclear.

OBJECTIVES: To compare the subjective burden of caregivers across three diagnostic groups using the 22-item Zarit Burden Inventory (ZBI).

METHODS: We performed a secondary analysis of pooled cross-sectional data from four U.K. studies of informal caregivers of patients with advanced cancer (n=105), dementia (n=131) and acquired brain injury (ABI) (n=215). ZBI totals, subscales (personal and role strain) and individual mean scores were compared between diagnostic groups using the general linear model, adjusting for caregiver characteristics.

RESULTS: Caregiver age (mean years [SD]: cancer 66.1 [12.0]; dementia 61.9 [13.4]; ABI 53.8 [10.9]) differed significantly across diagnostic groups (P<0.001); 81.9%, 36.6% and 59.1% of caregivers were spouse/partners, respectively (P<0.001). Total burden was highest in ABI caregivers and lowest in cancer (mean total score [SD]: cancer 23.3 [13.4]; dementia 27.9 [16.4]; ABI 39.1 [17.3]) (P<0.001). Subscale scores showed similar patterns (mean personal and role subscale scores [SD]: cancer 11.8 [6.9], 5.8 [4.8]; dementia 14.4 [8.8], 7.3 [5.7]; ABI 18.7 [9.1], 11.8 [6.0]) (P<0.001 for both subscales). Most (17 of 22) individual item scores differed by diagnosis group (P<0.05), except concepts of duty, responsibility and perception of financial situation.

CONCLUSION: Our data show that total, subscale and most individual elements of caregiver subjective burden differ between cancer, dementia and ABI caregivers. This should be considered when designing future intervention strategies to reduce caregiver burden in these groups.


Language: en

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