Finding Meaning in the Dementia Caregiving Relationship

<p>Caregivers of individuals with dementia describe a wide spectrum of caregiving experiences, ranging from very negative to very positive. Previous literature acknowledges these differing experiences, but how and why they differ has rarely been investigated. Dementia caregiving can be burdens...

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Main Author: Shim, Bomin
Other Authors: Davis, Linda L
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10161/3834
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spelling ndltd-DUKE-oai-dukespace.lib.duke.edu-10161-38342013-01-07T20:07:45ZFinding Meaning in the Dementia Caregiving RelationshipShim, BominNursingGerontologyCaregiverCaregiving relationshipDementiaFamily caregivingMeaning<p>Caregivers of individuals with dementia describe a wide spectrum of caregiving experiences, ranging from very negative to very positive. Previous literature acknowledges these differing experiences, but how and why they differ has rarely been investigated. Dementia caregiving can be burdensome with many psychological, physical, social and financial challenges. However, it can also be an opportunity for growth and transcendence as caregivers find meaning in caregiving. High levels of mutuality (the perception that the quality of the care relationship is positive), reportedly ameliorates negative caregiver outcomes. Thus, this dissertation consists of three studies that explore aspects of the caregiver-care recipient relationship that may enhance positive caregiving experiences. </p><p> The first study was a secondary analysis of factors related to caregivers' perceptions of care relationship mutuality over a 12 month period. Caregivers who reported high mutuality were less likely to be depressed and more likely to provide care for longer periods before deciding to institutionalize the care recipient. The second study was a secondary analysis of caregiver interviews. It revealed that caregivers who reported a positive caregiving experience described both their past and present relationship in loving terms and reported that they understood their care recipient could not reciprocate. These caregivers focused on aspects of the relationship that still existed, rather than on what they had lost. They expressed satisfaction with caregiving, were other-focused, and reported little caregiving burden. The third study was a qualitative descriptive study. Caregivers who reported finding meaning in caregiving were interviewed to explore how they were able to do so. These caregivers used strategies such as accepting the situation, deciding to care, choosing a positive attitude, focusing on the blessings of caregiving, and actively seeking care resources. They demonstrated altruistic values and the determination and discipline to live those values. They also possessed strong faith, love, and social support, and said they had derived strength from past challenges.</p><p> Clinicians and researchers should explore the quality of the caregiving relationship as a critical factor in caregiver and care recipient outcomes. Caregiver interventions should include relationship-building skills and empathy building techniques to offset adverse caregiver outcomes and enhance understanding and acceptance of changes that occur in the care recipient over time.</p>DissertationDavis, Linda L2011Dissertationhttp://hdl.handle.net/10161/3834
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic Nursing
Gerontology
Caregiver
Caregiving relationship
Dementia
Family caregiving
Meaning
spellingShingle Nursing
Gerontology
Caregiver
Caregiving relationship
Dementia
Family caregiving
Meaning
Shim, Bomin
Finding Meaning in the Dementia Caregiving Relationship
description <p>Caregivers of individuals with dementia describe a wide spectrum of caregiving experiences, ranging from very negative to very positive. Previous literature acknowledges these differing experiences, but how and why they differ has rarely been investigated. Dementia caregiving can be burdensome with many psychological, physical, social and financial challenges. However, it can also be an opportunity for growth and transcendence as caregivers find meaning in caregiving. High levels of mutuality (the perception that the quality of the care relationship is positive), reportedly ameliorates negative caregiver outcomes. Thus, this dissertation consists of three studies that explore aspects of the caregiver-care recipient relationship that may enhance positive caregiving experiences. </p><p> The first study was a secondary analysis of factors related to caregivers' perceptions of care relationship mutuality over a 12 month period. Caregivers who reported high mutuality were less likely to be depressed and more likely to provide care for longer periods before deciding to institutionalize the care recipient. The second study was a secondary analysis of caregiver interviews. It revealed that caregivers who reported a positive caregiving experience described both their past and present relationship in loving terms and reported that they understood their care recipient could not reciprocate. These caregivers focused on aspects of the relationship that still existed, rather than on what they had lost. They expressed satisfaction with caregiving, were other-focused, and reported little caregiving burden. The third study was a qualitative descriptive study. Caregivers who reported finding meaning in caregiving were interviewed to explore how they were able to do so. These caregivers used strategies such as accepting the situation, deciding to care, choosing a positive attitude, focusing on the blessings of caregiving, and actively seeking care resources. They demonstrated altruistic values and the determination and discipline to live those values. They also possessed strong faith, love, and social support, and said they had derived strength from past challenges.</p><p> Clinicians and researchers should explore the quality of the caregiving relationship as a critical factor in caregiver and care recipient outcomes. Caregiver interventions should include relationship-building skills and empathy building techniques to offset adverse caregiver outcomes and enhance understanding and acceptance of changes that occur in the care recipient over time.</p> === Dissertation
author2 Davis, Linda L
author_facet Davis, Linda L
Shim, Bomin
author Shim, Bomin
author_sort Shim, Bomin
title Finding Meaning in the Dementia Caregiving Relationship
title_short Finding Meaning in the Dementia Caregiving Relationship
title_full Finding Meaning in the Dementia Caregiving Relationship
title_fullStr Finding Meaning in the Dementia Caregiving Relationship
title_full_unstemmed Finding Meaning in the Dementia Caregiving Relationship
title_sort finding meaning in the dementia caregiving relationship
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/10161/3834
work_keys_str_mv AT shimbomin findingmeaninginthedementiacaregivingrelationship
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