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Experiences of Black and White Family Hospice Caregivers: Anxiety, Depression, QOL, Burden, Hospice Communication

Although hospice care benefits seriously ill patients and their families, growing evidence suggests anxiety, depression, and altered quality of life are prevalent among family hospice caregivers. It is unknown if Black and white family hospice caregivers experience differences in mental health, qual...

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Autores principales: Starr, Lauren, Washington, Karla, Aryal, Subhash, Oliver, Debra Parker, Demiris, George
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8681841/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/geroni/igab046.3150
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author Starr, Lauren
Washington, Karla
Aryal, Subhash
Oliver, Debra Parker
Demiris, George
author_facet Starr, Lauren
Washington, Karla
Aryal, Subhash
Oliver, Debra Parker
Demiris, George
author_sort Starr, Lauren
collection PubMed
description Although hospice care benefits seriously ill patients and their families, growing evidence suggests anxiety, depression, and altered quality of life are prevalent among family hospice caregivers. It is unknown if Black and white family hospice caregivers experience differences in mental health, quality of life, caregiver burden, or quality of hospice communication. In this secondary analysis of baseline data collected from 717 family hospice caregivers in two randomized clinical trials, we compared anxiety (GAD-7), depression (PHQ-9), quality of life (CQLI-R), caregiver burden (Zarit), and caregiver-reported quality of hospice team communication (CCCQ) between Black and white caregivers. Black and white caregivers differed demographically across multiple variables. In bivariate analysis, we found no differences in depression (P=0.3536), anxiety (P=0.0733), caregiver burden (P=0.6680), and perceptions of caregiver-centered hospice communication (P=0.4549). White caregivers reported lower quality of life than Blacks (P=0.0386), specifically in emotional (P=0.0321) and social (P=0.0002) domains. Financial and physical quality of life did not differ. In multivariate regression analyses controlling for caregiver and patient factors, we found no racial differences in depression (P= 0.5071), anxiety (P = 0.7288), quality of life (P=0.0584), caregiver burden (P=0.9465), or hospice communication (P=0.8779). Variables explained 7.7% to 20% of variability in outcomes, suggesting research is needed to understand which other factors contribute to hospice caregiver coping and communication experiences. Results suggest Black and white informal hospice caregivers experience similar levels of anxiety, depression, burden, and perceptions of hospice team communication quality. Interventions to support hospice caregivers across racial groups are needed.
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spelling pubmed-86818412021-12-20 Experiences of Black and White Family Hospice Caregivers: Anxiety, Depression, QOL, Burden, Hospice Communication Starr, Lauren Washington, Karla Aryal, Subhash Oliver, Debra Parker Demiris, George Innov Aging Abstracts Although hospice care benefits seriously ill patients and their families, growing evidence suggests anxiety, depression, and altered quality of life are prevalent among family hospice caregivers. It is unknown if Black and white family hospice caregivers experience differences in mental health, quality of life, caregiver burden, or quality of hospice communication. In this secondary analysis of baseline data collected from 717 family hospice caregivers in two randomized clinical trials, we compared anxiety (GAD-7), depression (PHQ-9), quality of life (CQLI-R), caregiver burden (Zarit), and caregiver-reported quality of hospice team communication (CCCQ) between Black and white caregivers. Black and white caregivers differed demographically across multiple variables. In bivariate analysis, we found no differences in depression (P=0.3536), anxiety (P=0.0733), caregiver burden (P=0.6680), and perceptions of caregiver-centered hospice communication (P=0.4549). White caregivers reported lower quality of life than Blacks (P=0.0386), specifically in emotional (P=0.0321) and social (P=0.0002) domains. Financial and physical quality of life did not differ. In multivariate regression analyses controlling for caregiver and patient factors, we found no racial differences in depression (P= 0.5071), anxiety (P = 0.7288), quality of life (P=0.0584), caregiver burden (P=0.9465), or hospice communication (P=0.8779). Variables explained 7.7% to 20% of variability in outcomes, suggesting research is needed to understand which other factors contribute to hospice caregiver coping and communication experiences. Results suggest Black and white informal hospice caregivers experience similar levels of anxiety, depression, burden, and perceptions of hospice team communication quality. Interventions to support hospice caregivers across racial groups are needed. Oxford University Press 2021-12-17 /pmc/articles/PMC8681841/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/geroni/igab046.3150 Text en © The Author(s) 2021. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of The Gerontological Society of America. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) ), which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Abstracts
Starr, Lauren
Washington, Karla
Aryal, Subhash
Oliver, Debra Parker
Demiris, George
Experiences of Black and White Family Hospice Caregivers: Anxiety, Depression, QOL, Burden, Hospice Communication
title Experiences of Black and White Family Hospice Caregivers: Anxiety, Depression, QOL, Burden, Hospice Communication
title_full Experiences of Black and White Family Hospice Caregivers: Anxiety, Depression, QOL, Burden, Hospice Communication
title_fullStr Experiences of Black and White Family Hospice Caregivers: Anxiety, Depression, QOL, Burden, Hospice Communication
title_full_unstemmed Experiences of Black and White Family Hospice Caregivers: Anxiety, Depression, QOL, Burden, Hospice Communication
title_short Experiences of Black and White Family Hospice Caregivers: Anxiety, Depression, QOL, Burden, Hospice Communication
title_sort experiences of black and white family hospice caregivers: anxiety, depression, qol, burden, hospice communication
topic Abstracts
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8681841/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/geroni/igab046.3150
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