Understanding resilience and its role in family caregiving for a person with dementia

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Understanding resilience and its role in family caregiving for a person with dementia Centre for Economic and Social Research on Dementia (CESRD), ILAS, NUI Galway 10 th February 2017 Presenter: Dr Attracta Lafferty

Overview Background Research team, collaborators, advisory group, project staff Dementia caregiving Resilience in dementia caregiving 3-year HRB project: Towards resilience in family caregiving for people with dementia Aim and objectives Research design Brief overview of 3 work packages Progress to date work package 1

Background National Centre for the Protection of Older People (NCPOP), UCD Towards resilience in family caregiving for people with dementia

Research Team Prof. Gerard Fealy, Principal Investigator, School of Nursing, Midwifery and Health Systems, University College Dublin Dr. Attracta Lafferty, Social Researcher, Project Manager, School of Nursing, Midwifery and Health Systems, University College Dublin Prof. Eilish McAuliffe, Professor of Health Systems, School of Nursing, Midwifery and Health System, University College Dublin Dr. Amanda Phelan, Associate Dean for Global Engagement, School of Nursing, Midwifery and Health Systems, University College Dublin Dr. Diarmuid O'Shea, Consultant Physician in Medicine for the Elderly, St Vincent's University Hospital Group and Registrar, Royal College of Physicians of Ireland Mr. Liam O'Sullivan, Executive Director and Ms. Zoe Hughes, Policy & Research Officer, Care Alliance Ireland

Project Collaborators Dr. Emer Begley, Research and Policy Manager, Alzheimer Society of Ireland Dr. Deirdre O'Donnell, Lecturer in Health Systems, UCD School of Nursing, Midwifery and Health Systems Mr. Réa McDunphy, Assistant Principal, Social Welfare Office, Department of Social Protection, Longford Dr. Claudia Cooper, Reader in Old Age Psychiatry, Division of Psychiatry, University College London Prof. Walter Cullen, Professor of Urban General Practice, UCD School of Medicine and Medical Sciences Ms. Naomi Feely, Senior Policy Officer, Age Action Ireland Mr. Diarmaid O Sullivan, Campaigns and Research Manager, Family Carers Ireland

Project Advisory Group Prof. Murna Downs, Head of School of Dementia Studies, Faculty of Health Studies, University of Bradford Dr. Shaun O Keefe, Consultant Physician in Geriatric Medicine, University Hospital Galway Ms. Sarah Mahon, Senior Dementia Strategy Projects Manager, HSE Ms. Regina Lafferty, Clinical Nurse Specialist in Dementia, North Dublin Mental Health Services for Older Persons Dr. Emer Begley, Research and Policy Manager, Alzheimer Society of Ireland Mr. Diarmaid O Sullivan, Campaigns and Research Manager, Family Carers Ireland Mr. Robert Cullen, Family Carer, Dublin Ms. Aisling Harmon, Family Carer, Dublin

Project Staff Ms. Áine Teahan, Research Assistant, School of Nursing, Midwifery and Health Systems, University College Dublin Dr Carla Reigada, Post Doctoral Research Fellow, School of Nursing, Midwifery and Health Systems, University College Dublin Ms Sandra McCarthy, Research Assistant, Care Alliance Ireland

Irish Policy j National Carers Strategy (2012) Emphasises the importance of carers being valued and supported to manage their caring responsibilities with confidence Carers need to be empowered to have a life of their own outside of caring (DoH 2012). Irish National Dementia Strategy (2014) Acknowledges that family caregivers provide the majority of care for people with dementia Highlights that dementia places great demands on family caregivers and can adversely affect carers well-being, social and economic circumstances and relationships (DoH 2014). Stresses the importance of promoting dementia-friendly communities to support carers and people with dementia

Family Carers in Ireland A Carer is a person who: provides regular unpaid personal help for a friend or family member with a long-term illness, health problem of disability (including problems due to old age). Personal help includes help with basic tasks such as feeding and dressing (CSO 2011; 2016) 4.1% of the Irish population identify themselves as an unpaid carer (aged 15 years and older) (CSO 2011) The majority of carers are female (61%) (CSO 2011) 52% are aged between 40 to 59 years (CSO 2011) One in five provide full-time care (i.e. 43 hours or more) (CSO 2011) 80% of primary caregivers to people aged 50 years and older are themselves aged 50 years and over (Kamiya et al. 2012)

Dementia Caregiving Approximately 55,000 people are living with dementia in Ireland. As a result of an ageing population, this number is expected to double by 2031 (Pierce, Cahill and O Shea 2011). It is estimated that approximately 23,000 older people with dementia live at home in the community, many of whom are unaware that they even have the disease (Cahill, O Shea and Pierce 2012). For every one person diagnosed, three other family members are significantly affected (DoH 2014; Cahill, O Shea and Pierce 2012).

Dementia Caregiving There will be an increased reliance on family carers to provide care in the community. While up to 90% of people with dementia have significant behavioural disturbances (BPSD) that challenge carers (Sadavoy et al. 2008), many carers have no preparation for the role (Arskey et al., 2004). Dementia caregiving can result in: Carer burden (Sörensen et al. 2006) Symptoms of depression (Sörensen et al. 2006). High levels of psychological distress (O Shea 2000). Poor carer health (Etters et al. 2008). Early nursing home placements for people with dementia (Etters et al. 2008). Conflict in the caregiving relationship (Lafferty et al. 2014; Cooper et al. 2009; Yan and Kwok 2011)

Resilience HOWEVER while many carers experience challenges with caring for a person with dementia, not all carers experience burden, depression and other psychosocial effects of caregiving. Such carers may be considered resilient and are able to recover from, resist, or adapt to the physical and psychological demands of caring (Herrman et al. 2011). Carer resilience can predict lower levels of depression in spousal carers of people with dementia (O Rourke et al. 2010). Carer resilience is considered an important factor in suicide prevention (Johnson et al. 2011). On the whole, there has been a general shift towards exploring psychological resources that empower people to cope.

What is Resilience?

Defining Resilience Resilience in adults can be operationally defined as: the process of effectively negotiating, adapting to, or managing significant sources of stress or trauma. Assets and resources within the individual, their life and environment facilitate this capacity for adaptation and bouncing back in the face of adversity (Windle 2011)

Carer Resilience in Dementia Figure1 : Model of factors influencing resilience (Cherry et al. 2013)

Towards resilience in family caregiving for people with dementia 3-year HRB project Overall Aim To promote resilience in family carers of people with dementia using participatory action research to develop an innovative Enhancing Carers Resilience (EnCaRe) programme. Objectives 1. Synthesise current evidence of resilience-enhancing and related psychosocial interventions and initiatives aimed at promoting positive outcomes for family carers 2. Measure and describe family carers experiences of caring for a person with dementia and their resilience in caregiving 3. Establish a network group comprising family carers of people with dementia and members of the research team and, through the network, develop and design an Enhancing Carers Resilience (EnCaRe) Programme 4. Conduct a feasibility study of the EnCaRe Programme through a demonstration project among a cohort of current family carers of people with dementia 5. Evaluate the EnCaRe Programme with reference to structure, process and outcome elements

Research Design A participatory action research framework based on the principle of collaborative inquiry with the aim of enabling and facilitating carers to develop an Enhancing Carers Resilience (EnCaRe) Programme for family caregivers of people with dementia. Needs analysis Investigate caregiver experiences (literature reviews & survey) Work package 1 Describe family caregivers' resilience Work package 1 Evaluate Conduct a feasibility study of the EnCaRe programme Work package 3 Action plan Establish carer network group to co-create an EnCaRe Programme Work package 2 Introduce the EnCaRE Programme with family caregivers Work package 2

Work package 1

Systematic Literature Review Method Synthesise current research of resilience in informal caregivers of people with dementia and highlight non-pharmacological interventions aimed at promoting positive outcomes for informal carers. Scholarly databases: Cochrane, PubMed, CINAHL, EMBASE, PsycInfo, ASSIA Search terms String 1 String 2 String 3 Final Search Dementia OR Alzheimer OR 'Vascular dementia' OR 'Lewy bodies' OR 'Frontotemporal dementia' OR Korsakoff OR 'memory loss' OR 'mild cognitive impairment Carer OR caregiver OR care-giver OR caregiving OR family OR relative OR kinship OR informal OR spousal OR spouse OR wife Or husband OR daughter OR son OR brother OR sister Resilience OR resiliency OR resilient OR protective factors OR burden OR well-being OR wellbeing OR well being OR health OR self-efficacy OR management OR adapting OR interpersonal OR intrapersonal OR self-esteem OR quality of life OR sense of coherence (Dementia OR Alzheimer OR 'Vascular dementia' OR 'Lewy bodies' OR 'Frontotemporal dementia' OR Korsakoff OR 'memory loss' OR 'mild cognitive impairment') AND (Carer OR caregiver OR care-giver OR caregiving OR family OR relative OR kinship OR informal OR spousal OR spouse OR wife Or husband OR daughter OR son OR brother OR sister) AND (Resilience OR resiliency OR resilient OR protective factors OR burden OR well-being OR wellbeing OR well being OR health OR self-efficacy OR management OR adapting OR interpersonal OR intrapersonal OR self-esteem OR quality of life OR sense of coherence )(2006-2016)(English language)

Meta-analysis 27 intervention studies Carer burden Quality of life Carer outcomes Depression General health

Postage survey of family carers of people with dementia National cross-sectional survey of family carers in receipt of a carer s allowance for care provided to a person with dementia Collaborating with Department of Social Protection, in sourcing a sample of family carers (3 mail-outs) 822 dementia carers in receipt of carers allowance for 825 care-recipients with dementia (March 2016) Data has been collected on: Carer demographics Carer resilience and carer burden Caregiving activities Perceived social support Service utilisation Care-recipient demographics Dementia-related behavioural problems Knowledge of dementia

Secondary analysis Pre-existing dataset of 2311 informal carers of older people 485 participants cared for a person with dementia Factors to be examined include: Demographic profile of carers Profile of care-recipients with dementia Caregiving activities Support and coping Experience of being mistreated Potentially harmful carer behaviours

Work package 2 Objective 3: Establish a network group comprising family carers of people with dementia and members of the research team and, through the network, develop and design an Enhancing Carers Resilience (EnCaRe) Programme The EnCaRe Network group Up to six family carers of people with dementia Two research team members Bimonthly meetings Invite experts in the field to come in to present to the group EnCaRe Programme Develop a grounded definition of resilience Informed by findings generated in work package 1 of the project A workable resilience-enhancing programme for peer family carers Grounded in carers own experiences and perspectives and designed by the Network Examples: training materials, peer support groups, online supports/forums, workshops, communication enhancing techniques etc.

Work package 3 Objective 4: Conduct a feasibility study of the EnCaRe Programme among family carers of people with dementia through a demonstration project among a cohort of family caregivers. Objective 5: Evaluate the EnCaRe Programme with reference to structure, process and outcome elements

References Cahill, S., O Shea, E. and Pierce, M. (2012) Creating excellence in dementia care. A research review for Ireland s national dementia strategy. Dublin: Department of Health. Cherry, M.G., Salmon, P., Dickson, JM, Powell, D., Sikdar, S. and Ablett, J. (2013) Factors influencing the resilience of carers of individuals with dementia. Reviews in Clinical Gerontology, 23(4), 251 266. Doebler, S. "The Health and Mental Health of Informal Caregivers in Rural and Urban Northern Ireland." Herrman, H., Stewart, D., Diaz-Granados, N., Berger, E., Jackson, B. and Yuen T. (2011) What is resilience? Canadian Journal of Psychiatry, 56(5), 258 265. Johnson, J., Wood, A.M., Gooding, P. and Tarrier, N. (2011) Resilience to suicidality: The buffering hypothesis. Clinical Psychology Review, 31, 563 591. Lafferty A, Fealy G, Downes C, Drennan D. (2014). Family carers of older people: Results of a national survey of stress, conflict and coping. Morimoto, Tomoko, Andrea S. Schreiner, and Hitoshi Asano. "Caregiver burden and health related quality of life among Japanese stroke caregivers."age and Ageing 32.2 (2003): 218-223. O Rourke, N., Kupferschmidt, A.L., Claxton, A., Smith, J.Z., Chappell, N., and Beattie, B.L. (2010) Psychological resilience predicts depressive symptoms among spouses of persons with Alzheimer's disease over time. Aging and Mental Health, 14(8), 984 993. Sadavoy, J., Lanctôt, K. L., & Deb, S. (2008). Management of behavioural and psychological symptoms of dementia and acquired brain injury. Cambridge Textbook of Effective Treatments in Psychiatry,187-216. Sörensen, S., Duberstein, P., Gill, D., & Pinquart, M. (2006). Dementia care: mental health effects, intervention strategies, and clinical implications. The Lancet Neurology, 5(11), 961-973.. Windle, G. (2011) What is resilience? A review and concept analysis. Reviews in Clinical Gerontology, 21, 152 169.

Thank You! attracta.lafferty@ucd.ie