Bereavement After Informal Caregiving: Assessing Mental Health Burden Using Linked Population Data.

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Bibliographic Details
Title: Bereavement After Informal Caregiving: Assessing Mental Health Burden Using Linked Population Data.
Authors: Moriarty, John (AUTHOR), Maguire, Aideen (AUTHOR), O'Reilly, Dermot (AUTHOR), McCann, Mark (AUTHOR)
Source: American Journal of Public Health. Aug2015, Vol. 105 Issue 8, p1630-1637. 8p.
Subjects: Bereavement, Psychology of caregivers, Chi-squared test, Confidence intervals, Home nursing, Mental health, Research funding, Burden of care, Data analysis software, Descriptive statistics, Odds ratio, Psychological factors
Geographic Terms: Northern Ireland
Abstract: Objectives. We compared the mental health risk to unpaid caregivers bereaved of a care recipient with the risk to persons otherwise bereaved and to nonbereaved caregivers. Methods. We linked prescription records for antidepressant and anxiolytic drugs to characteristics and life-event data of members of the Northern Ireland Longitudinal Study (n = 317 264). Using a case-control design, we fitted logistic regression models, stratified by age, to model relative likelihood of mental health problems, using the proxy measures of mental health-related prescription. Results. Both caregivers and bereaved individuals were estimated to be at between 20% and 50% greater risk for mental health problems than noncare-givers in similar circumstances (for bereaved working-age caregivers, odds ratio =1.41; 95% confidence interval = 1.27, 1.56). For older people, there was no evidence of additional risk to bereaved caregivers, though there was for working-age people. Older people appeared to recover more quickly from caregiver bereavement. Conclusions. Caregivers were at risk for mental ill health while providing care and after the death of the care recipient. Targeted caregiver support needs to extend beyond the life of the care recipient. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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Database: Psychology and Behavioral Sciences Collection
Description
Abstract:Objectives. We compared the mental health risk to unpaid caregivers bereaved of a care recipient with the risk to persons otherwise bereaved and to nonbereaved caregivers. Methods. We linked prescription records for antidepressant and anxiolytic drugs to characteristics and life-event data of members of the Northern Ireland Longitudinal Study (n = 317 264). Using a case-control design, we fitted logistic regression models, stratified by age, to model relative likelihood of mental health problems, using the proxy measures of mental health-related prescription. Results. Both caregivers and bereaved individuals were estimated to be at between 20% and 50% greater risk for mental health problems than noncare-givers in similar circumstances (for bereaved working-age caregivers, odds ratio =1.41; 95% confidence interval = 1.27, 1.56). For older people, there was no evidence of additional risk to bereaved caregivers, though there was for working-age people. Older people appeared to recover more quickly from caregiver bereavement. Conclusions. Caregivers were at risk for mental ill health while providing care and after the death of the care recipient. Targeted caregiver support needs to extend beyond the life of the care recipient. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
ISSN:00900036
DOI:10.2105/AJPH.2015.302597