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Comprehensive Family Caregiver Support and Caregiver Well-Being: Preliminary Evidence From a Pre-post-survey Study With a Non-equivalent Control Group.
Abstract
Introduction: In May 2010, the Caregivers and Veterans Omnibus Health Services Act of 2010, was
signed into law in the United States, establishing the Program of Comprehensive Assistance
for Family Caregivers (PCAFC) provided through the VA Caregiver Support Program (CSP).
Prior to this program, over half of family caregivers reported being untrained for
the tasks they needed to provide. The training through PCAFC represents the largest
effort to train family caregivers in the U.S., and the features of the program, specifically
a monthly stipend to caregivers and access to a Caregiver Support Coordinator at each
VA medical center nationally, make it the most comprehensive caregiver support program
ever enacted in the U.S. Methods: The purpose of this study is to examine the association between PCAFC participation
and caregiver well-being following enrollment, comparing participating PCAFC caregivers
to caregivers who applied to but were not approved for PCAFC participation (non-participants).
Well-being is defined using three diverse but related outcomes: depressive symptoms,
perceived financial strain, and perceived quality of the Veteran's health care. Additional
well-being measures also examined include the Zarit Burden Inventory and positive
aspects of caregiving. Results: The survey sample comprised of 92 caregivers approved for PCAFC and 66 caregivers
not approved. The mean age of responding caregivers was 45; over 90% of caregivers
were female; and over 80% of caregivers were married in both groups. We find promising
trends in well-being associated with PCAFC participation. First, the perception of
financial strain declined among participants compared to non-participants. Second,
while depressive symptoms did not improve for the PCAFC caregivers, depressive symptoms
increased among non-participants. Third, perceived quality of the Veteran's VA healthcare
was no different between participants and non-participants. However, the 158 returned
surveys reflect only a 5% response rate; hence this evidence is preliminary. Conclusion: Despite cautioning that results be interpreted as preliminary, this study provides
unique descriptive information about young caregivers of U.S. post-9/11 Veterans,
and offers a first step in filling the evidence gap about how comprehensive caregiver
support in the U.S. may affect caregiver well-being. These preliminary findings should
be explored and validated in a larger sample.
Type
Journal articleSubject
caregiver well-beingdepressive symptoms
informal care
informal caregiver
policy intervention
pre-post-survey
quality of life
veterans
Permalink
https://hdl.handle.net/10161/26152Published Version (Please cite this version)
10.3389/fpubh.2019.00122Publication Info
Smith, Valerie A; Lindquist, Jennifer; Miller, Katherine EM; Shepherd-Banigan, Megan;
Olsen, Maren; Campbell-Kotler, Margaret; ... Van Houtven, Courtney Harold (2019). Comprehensive Family Caregiver Support and Caregiver Well-Being: Preliminary Evidence
From a Pre-post-survey Study With a Non-equivalent Control Group. Frontiers in public health, 7(May). pp. 122. 10.3389/fpubh.2019.00122. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/26152.This is constructed from limited available data and may be imprecise. To cite this
article, please review & use the official citation provided by the journal.
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Show full item recordScholars@Duke
Maren Karine Olsen
Professor of Biostatistics & Bioinformatics
Health services research, longitudinal data methods, missing data methods
Megan E Shepherd-Banigan
Assistant Professor in Population Health Sciences
Dr. Megan Shepherd-Banigan designs research studies to improve the health, emotional
well-being, and social functioning of adults with mental and physical disabilities.
Her methods combine empirical approaches that address methodologically challenging
research questions in health systems and policy research. Dr. Shepherd-Banigan uses
large survey and administrative datasets to evaluate the impact of policies that support
family members to care for adults with disabilities. </p
Valerie A. Smith
Associate Professor in Population Health Sciences
Valerie A. Smith, DrPH, is an Associate Professor in the Duke University Department
of Population Health Sciences and Senior Research Director of the Biostatistics Core
at the Durham Veterans Affairs Medical Center's Center of Innovation. Her methodological
research interests include: methods for semicontinuous and zero-inflated data, economic
modeling methods, causal inference methods, observational study design, and longitudinal
data analysis. Her current methodological research h
Courtney Harold Van Houtven
Professor in Population Health Sciences
Dr. Courtney Van Houtven is a Professor in The Department of Population Health Science,
Duke University School of Medicine and Duke-Margolis Center for Health Policy. She
is also a Research Career Scientist in The Center of Innovation to Accelerate Discovery
and Practice Transformation (ADAPT), Durham Veterans Affairs Health Care System. Dr.
Van Houtven’s aging and economics research interests encompass long-term care financing,
intra-household decision-making, unpaid family and friend car
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