• J Soc Work End Life Palliat Care · Jan 2010

    Levels, types, and predictors of family caregiver strain during hospice home care for an older adult.

    • Aloen L Townsend, Karen J Ishler, Beth M Shapiro, Elizabeth Ford Pitorak, and Carol R Matthews.
    • Mandel School of Applied Social Sciences, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio 44106, USA. aloen.townsend@case.edu
    • J Soc Work End Life Palliat Care. 2010 Jan 1;6(1-2):51-72.

    AbstractAcademic researchers and professionals from a hospice organization collaborated to assess physical, emotional, social, economic, and spiritual strain stemming from providing care to a terminally ill older relative among 162 family caregivers to older adults newly admitted to hospice home care. The study investigated predictors of the different types of strain, as well as cumulative strain. Hierarchical multiple regressions revealed that caregivers' age and race, hospice patients' major illnesses (particularly cancer), caregivers' appraisals of their situation, and resources were significant risk or protective factors for caregiver strain, although the predictors varied by type of strain and amount of strain. Discussion focuses on the importance of identifying family caregivers at risk of higher strain during hospice home care and implications for family caregiver interventions.

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