Effectiveness of interventions that assist caregivers to support people with dementia living in the community: a systematic review

Jun 3, 2011International journal of evidence-based healthcare

How well support programs help caregivers assist people with dementia living at home

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Abstract

A total of 40 studies were included in the review, focusing on interventions for caregivers of people living with dementia.

  • Psycho-educational interventions showed small but significant improvements in caregiver depression and burden, while having no significant impact on subjective well-being, self-efficacy, or health.
  • Support-only interventions indicated a small but significant reduction in caregiver burden in two studies suitable for meta-analysis.
  • Multi-component interventions reported significant benefits across various outcome measures, including self-efficacy, depression, subjective well-being, and burden, although no meta-analysis was feasible due to study heterogeneity.
  • Other interventions, such as exercise and nutrition, led to improvements in psychological distress and health, while case management and computer-aided support produced mixed results.
  • Meta-analysis of eight studies indicated small but significant positive effects of psycho-educational and multi-component interventions on caregiver depression.

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Full Text

Full text is available at the source.

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