Caregivers feel good about themselves and job in modified intervention program
ANN ARBOR—Dementia caregivers feel better about themselves and their jobs through a modified intervention program created by community agencies and researchers at the University of Michigan and University of Alabama.
This new program resulted in caregivers feeling less burdened, depressed or frustrated with clients.
The study is one of the first caregiver intervention efforts designed from an empirically based treatment and used by a social service agency, said Louis Burgio, a professor in the U-M School of Social Work and research professor at the Institute of Gerontology.
“The vast majority of NIH-funded psychosocial clinical trial interventions never make it into the community, which makes this study unique because caregivers in the community are benefitting from the findings,” said Burgio. His research in applied gerontology focuses on developing interventions for the behavioral complications of dementia in nursing homes and working with dementia caregivers to ease the stress and burden of care giving.
Researchers established a partnership with the Alabama Department of Senior Services to help them change the Resources for Enhancing Alzheimer’s Caregiver Health (REACH) II intervention created in clinical trials for use in four Area Agencies on Aging.
“Most importantly, through these procedures all aspects of the program were managed by the community agencies,” Burgio said.
The condensed REACH intervention, which was called REACH OUT, was delivered to 272 dementia caregivers during four home visits and three telephone calls for four months. The assessment examined pre? and post-treatment effects on 236 caregivers who completed at least three of the four sessions.
Significant positive effects were found on caregiver frustration, depression and health and care recipient behavior problems and mood, and two of four care recipient risk behaviors. Caregivers reported care recipients were less likely to be left unsupervised and wander.
Researchers also conducted training workshops for case managers to assist agencies’ staff.
Burgio said this project suggests that the latest REACH intervention can be modified for effective use in aging agencies.
The study’s co-authors at the University of Alabama were Irene Collins, Bettina Schmid, Tracy Wharton, Debra McCallum and Jamie DeCoster.
The findings appear in the recent issue of the Gerontologist.
Links:
Burgio: http://ssw.umich.edu/about/profiles/profile-lburgio.html
U-M School of Social Work: http://www.ssw.umich.edu/
Gerontologist: http://gerontologist.oxfordjournals.org/index.dtl