Objective. The main hypothesis was that carers of dementia suerers who have a higher level of knowledge on the subject of dementia have lower rates of physical and psychological morbidity. We also wanted to examine whether a carer's level of knowledge bears any relation to their attributional style
CARERS' KNOWLEDGE OF DEMENTIA AND THEIR EXPRESSED CONCERNS
โ Scribed by CANDIDA GRAHAM; CLIVE BALLARD; PAK SHAM
- Book ID
- 101286986
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1997
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 82 KB
- Volume
- 12
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0885-6230
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Objective. The authors wished to determine how much carers from dierent settings caring for patients with dementia knew about the disorder and elicit their main concerns about the disease.
Design. A survey questionnaire was administered to 136 carers.
Setting. Two old age psychiatric services and an Alzheimer's support group in urban areas of the UK.
Participants. The carers came from one of three categories: (1) carers with no prior contact with elderly mental health services (preassessment group); (2) carers who had been in contact with mental health care professionals (postassessment group); (3) carers in contact with an Alzheimer's Disease Society support group.
Measures. A questionnaire on the subject of dementia. Carers' worries about the disorder were also recorded.
Results. Carers in contact with an Alzheimer's support group were the most knowledgeable and carers in the preassessment group were the least knowledgeable on the subject of dementia. While carers in the postassessment group had a level of knowledge above that of the preassessment group, this dierence failed to reach statistical signiยฎcance.
Conclusion. The study highlights the need for elderly mental health teams to evaluate their methods of dissemination of knowledge to carers, develop educational packages for carers and evaluate their eectiveness.
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