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Gender of demented patients and specific family relationship of caregiver to patients influence mental fatigue and burdens on relatives as caregivers

✍ Scribed by Itsugi Nagatomo; Yasuaki Akasaki; Masahiro Uchida; Masataka Tominaga; Wataru Hashiguchi; Morikuni Takigawa


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1999
Tongue
English
Weight
106 KB
Volume
14
Category
Article
ISSN
0885-6230

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✦ Synopsis


Objectives. To survey the burden and psychological problems of family caregivers of demented people. Design. All scores were compared according to gender of the demented patients and which family members were the caregivers.

Setting. Outpatients clinic at the university hospital and the day service system for the elderly.

Patients. Sixty-two demented patients living at home and family members acting as caregivers.

Measures. Cognitive function, activities of daily living (ADL) and behaviour of demented patients were rated using the Hasegawa scale, the ADL scale and the dementia behaviour disturbance (DBD) scale. Caregiver's burden and mental fatigue were rated using a burden scale and a general health questionnaire (GHQ).

Results. Caregiver burden correlated negatively with the Hasegawa score and positively with the GHQ and DBD scores. Caregiver burden, GHQ and DBD for male patients were signi®cantly higher than for females. Little dierence was evident for caregiver burden scale or patient DBD between spouses and ospring as caregiver, but the GHQ score for spouses was signi®cantly worse than that for ospring.

Conclusions. The diculty of caregivers in supporting the daily life of demented family members correlated with patients' cognitive impairment, abnormal behaviour and ADL status, and caregivers' diculty resulted in mental fatigue. Caregivers' relative isolation from friends, attributable to their caregiving responsibility, did not correlate with the demented person's cognitive impairment or ADL status.