Needs and quality of life of people with middle-stage dementia and their family carers from the European Actifcare study. When informal care alone may not suffice

Liselot Kerpershoek, Marjolein de Vugt, Claire Wolfs, Robert Woods, Hannah Jelley, Martin Orrell, Anja Bieber, Gabriele Meyer, Geir Selbaek, Ron Handels, Anders Wimo, Louise Hopper, Kate Irving, Maria J. Marques, Manuel Gonçalves-Pereira, Elisa Portolani, Orazio Zanetti, Frans Verhey

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    Abstract

    Objective: The Actifcare (Access to timely formal care) study investigated needs of people with dementia and their families during the phase in which formal care is being considered, and examined whether higher need levels are related to lower quality of life (QOL).
    Method: From eight European countries 451 people with dementia and their carers participated. Needs were measured with the Camberwell Assessment of Need for the Elderly. QOL was measured with the QOL-AD, and carer quality of life was measured with the CarerQol. The relationship between needs and QOL was analysed with multiple regression analyses.
    Results: Needs were expressed in the domains of psychological distress, daytime activities, company and information. People with dementia rated their unmet needs significantly lower than their carers: the mean number of self-rated unmet needs was 0.95, whereas the mean proxy ratings were 1.66. For met needs, the self-rated mean was 5.5 and was 8 when proxy-rated. The level of needs reported was negatively associated with QOL for both.
    Conclusion: The study results show that informal carers reported almost twice as many needs as people with dementia. The domains in which needs are expressed should be the primary focus for interventions to support QOL. The perspectives of people with dementia are informative when identifying needs.
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)897-902
    Number of pages6
    JournalAging and Mental Health
    Volume22
    Issue number7
    Early online date25 Oct 2017
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - Jul 2018

    Keywords

    • Dementia
    • (un)met needs
    • Informal carer
    • Quality of Life

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