Care giving experiences of older husbands providing care for wives with dementia

  • Peter J. Brown

Western Sydney University thesis: Doctoral thesis

Abstract

As there were few studies of older husbands' experiences associated with providing care at home for spouses with dementia, the researcher designed a two-stage study to examine their experiences, In stage one, a qualitative paradigm guided one-to-one interviews with sixteen care giver husbands to examine their care giving experiences. Analysis of the interview data guided the identification of four models of care giving related to the past, present and future and an overall model over time. In stage two, a comprehensive questionnaire was developed and questionnaire items were identified from multiple sources. In stage two the researcher utilized a quantitative approach to identify to investigate husbands' experiences. A representative sample of 71 care giver husbands participated by completing the questionnaire and standardized measures of burden and depression along with other measures of husbands' characteristics and experiences and levels of wives' illness and associated behaviour. Predictive models of care giver burden were care giving seen as a 'job', effects of care giving on the husband-wife relationship, and use of avoidant-evasive coping strategies by husbands. The best predictive models of care giver depression were use of avoidant-evasive coping strategies and changes in husbands' emotional health status related to care giving.
Date of Award2007
Original languageEnglish

Keywords

  • male caregivers
  • dementia patients
  • long term care
  • nursing
  • family relationships

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