Self-reported Burden Of Caregiver Of Adults With Depression
Caregiving in depression imposes a complex health and economic burden. A paucity of studies examining the impact for adult relatives with unipolar depression.
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Research article overview in layman's terms.
This study looked at how caregivers of adults with depression (CG-UD) compared to caregivers of adults with other chronic conditions (CG-OD) and non-caregivers (non-CG). It found that CG-UD had lower health status and health-related quality of life, as well as greater work productivity and activity impairment and more healthcare resource utilization than the other two groups.
Caregivers of adults with depression also experienced a greater lack of family support, an impact on their finances and more disruption to their schedules. These findings show that the burden for caregivers of adults with depression is greater than for the general population, and those caring for those with other chronic conditions.
Self-reported burden of caregiver of adults with depression: a cross-sectional study in five Western European countries
Abstract
Adults With Depression
Caregiving in depression imposes a complex health and economic burden. Moreover, there is a paucity of studies examining the impact of caregiving for adult relatives with unipolar depression (CG-UD). This study assessed the burden among CG-UD in five western European (EUR5) countries (France, Germany, Italy, Spain and the United Kingdom) compared with caregivers of adults with other chronic comorbidities (CG-OD) and general non-caregiving (non-CG) population.
Methods
A retrospective observational study was conducted using the 2016 National Health and Wellness Survey (NHWS) in EUR5. Differences in humanistic burden (health status and health-related quality of life [HRQoL]) and economic burden (work productivity and activity impairments, health care resource utilization [HRU]) were assessed between CG-UD and CG-OD respondents. Caregiver-specific burden (caregiving responsibilities and caregiver reaction assessment [CRA]) was assessed between caregiver groups. Generalized linear models were used to compare between the groups on the outcomes after adjusting for potential confounders.
Results
Of the 77,418 survey respondents examined, 1380 identified as CG-UD, 6470 as CG-OD and 69,334 as non-CG. Compared to CG-OD and non-CG, CG-UD, reported significantly lower health status (e.g., EuroQoL-5 Dimensions-5 Levels [EQ-5D-5L]: CG-UD=0.63, CG-OD=0.67, and non-CG=0.73, p<0.001) and HRQoL (e.g., mental component score: CG-UD=35.0, CG-OD=37.8, and non-CG=40.7, p<0.001). Although effect sizes were small (d<0.2), minimal clinically important differences (MCID) were apparent for HRQoL and health status. Increased economic-related burden was observed for work and activity impairment (e.g., absenteeism: CG-UD=32.6%, CG-OD=26.5%, and non-CG=14.8%, p<0.001) and HRU (e.g., healthcare provider [HCP; mean, past 6months]: CG-UD=10.5, CG-OD=8.6, and non-CG=6.8, p<0.001). Caregiving-specific burden was associated with experiencing a greater lack of family support (CG-UD: 2.9 vs CG-OD: 2.8, p<0.01), impact on finances (CG-UD: 3.0 vs CG-OD: 2.9, p=0.036), and on the caregivers schedule (CG-UD: 3.1 vs CG-OD: 3.0, p=0.048).
Conclusion
Caregivers of persons with chronic disease experience an excess humanistic and economic burden compared to the general population, with a greater burden confronting caregiver for adults with depression. These findings illustrate the far-reaching burden of depression on both the patient and the relatives who care for them.
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