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A Comparison of Well-Being of Carers of People with Dementia and Their Ability to Manage Before and During the COVID-19 Pandemic: Findings from the IDEAL Study

Gamble, Laura D.; Parker, Sophie; Quinn, Catherine; Bennett, Holly Q.; Martyr, Anthony; Sabatini, Serena; Pentecost, Claire; Collins, Rachel; Dawson, Eleanor; Hunt, Anna; Allan, Louise; Burns, Alistair; Litherland, Rachael; Victor, Christina; Matthews, Fiona E.; Clare, Linda

Authors

Laura D. Gamble

Sophie Parker

Catherine Quinn

Holly Q. Bennett

Anthony Martyr

Serena Sabatini

Claire Pentecost

Rachel Collins

Eleanor Dawson

Anna Hunt

Louise Allan

Alistair Burns

Rachael Litherland

Christina Victor

Linda Clare



Abstract

Background: Social restriction measures imposed to curb the spread of COVID-19 in the United Kingdom impacted on carers of people with dementia, limiting access to support services and increasing perceived burden of caring. Few studies have compared data collected both during and before the pandemic to examine the effect of these changes. Objective: To explore whether the COVID-19 pandemic affected the well-being of carers of people with dementia living in the community, and their ability to cope with their caring responsibilities. Methods: Analysis was conducted on two groups of carers who were enrolled in the IDEAL programme; the 'pre-pandemic group' (n = 312), assessed at two time points prior to the pandemic, and the 'pandemic group', assessed prior to and several months into the pandemic (n = 156). For the pre-pandemic group, carers were matched 2:1 to carers in the pandemic group on certain characteristics. Differences in change over time between the two groups on self-reported well-being, quality of life, coping, perceived competence, and role captivity, were investigated using mixed effect modelling. Results: Compared to the pre-pandemic group, those in the pandemic group appeared to cope better and had more stable self-rated competency and role captivity. They did not differ in terms of well-being or quality of life. Conclusions: Despite reports of negative impacts on carers early in the pandemic, the findings suggest the pandemic had little negative longer-term impact on carers of people with dementia, and in fact they appeared to have a more positive attitude towards coping several months into the pandemic.

Citation

Gamble, L. D., Parker, S., Quinn, C., Bennett, H. Q., Martyr, A., Sabatini, S., Pentecost, C., Collins, R., Dawson, E., Hunt, A., Allan, L., Burns, A., Litherland, R., Victor, C., Matthews, F. E., & Clare, L. (2022). A Comparison of Well-Being of Carers of People with Dementia and Their Ability to Manage Before and During the COVID-19 Pandemic: Findings from the IDEAL Study. Journal of Alzheimer's Disease, 88(2), 679-692. https://doi.org/10.3233/JAD-220221

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date May 6, 2022
Online Publication Date Jul 19, 2022
Publication Date Jan 1, 2022
Deposit Date Dec 16, 2023
Publicly Available Date Dec 21, 2023
Journal Journal of Alzheimer's Disease
Print ISSN 1387-2877
Publisher IOS Press
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 88
Issue 2
Pages 679-692
DOI https://doi.org/10.3233/JAD-220221
Keywords Alzheimer’s disease; Competence; Coping; Quality of life; Role captivity; Well-being
Public URL https://hull-repository.worktribe.com/output/4450999
Related Public URLs https://eprints.ncl.ac.uk/282041