Keywords

caregiver strain/burden, caregivers, heart failure, hospitalization, mortality

 

Authors

  1. Bidwell, Julie T. PhD, RN
  2. Lee, Christopher S. PhD, RN
  3. Higgins, Melinda K. PhD
  4. Reilly, Carolyn M. PhD, RN
  5. Clark, Patricia C. PhD, RN
  6. Dunbar, Sandra B. PhD, RN

Abstract

Background: In a study of Italian heart failure patient-caregiver dyads, greater caregiver strain significantly predicted lower patient clinical event risk.

 

Objective: The purpose of this secondary analysis was to examine this relationship in a sample from the United States.

 

Methods: Data came from 92 dyads who participated in a self-care intervention. Logistic regression was used to test the relationship between baseline strain (Bakas Caregiving Outcomes Scale, divided into tertiles) and patient likelihood of events (heart failure hospitalization/emergency visit or all-cause mortality) over 8 months.

 

Results: Nearly half of patients (n = 40, 43.5%) had an event. High (vs low) caregiver strain was associated with a 92.7% event-risk reduction, but with substantial variability around the effect (odds ratio, 0.07; 95% confidence interval, 0.01-0.63; P = .02).

 

Conclusions: Although findings were similar to the Italian study, the high degree of variability and contrasting findings to other studies signal a level of complexity that warrants further investigation.