Caregivers May Benefit From Adult Day Care
Main Category: Caregivers / HomecareAlso Included In: Alzheimer's / Dementia; Anxiety / Stress
Article Date: 01 Jul 2009 - 3:00 PDT
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Caring for an elderly family member can be stressful and can pose health threats to caregivers. Steven Zarit, professor and head, Department of Human Development and Family Studies, Penn State, received a $3 million grant from the National Institute on Aging to study the effects of caregiving on familial caregivers. He will look at people who care for family members with dementia and how adult day care impacts the stress levels of all individuals involved.
People with dementia experience progressive memory loss, which can lead them to act out in ways that are not always easy to handle. They may try to leave the house, struggle with dressing, reject help and become agitated. This erratic behavior requires constant surveillance and any lapses in vigilance could lead to danger. Trained professionals are more prepared to deal with these types of behaviors and often experience less stress than family members.
"Using adult day care can reduce stress for family members by lifting the burden of responsibility from them for a few hours," said Zarit. "At the same time, day care provides stimulating activities that promote sleep and well-being in those being cared for."
Zarit will interview and collect saliva samples from caregivers on eight consecutive days to test both self-perceptions of stress and physiological stress. Because adult day care is typically used only three or four days a week, he will be able to assess how stress levels fluctuate when day care is used or not used.
"In many studies that test stress in individuals, the subjects might only have one day that they experience high stress," said Zarit. "In this experiment, though, participants will experience several days of high stress. This should give us a better understanding of the mechanism through which stress affects our health and it will be able to tell us what happens physiologically when someone reports having a good or bad day."
Through his research, Zarit will be able to assess whether or not using day care truly improves the health of people suffering from dementia and their family members. He will work with 180 participants over three years, primarily with adult day care centers in New Jersey, which are known for providing excellent day care service.
Source:
A'ndrea Elyse Messer
Penn State
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12 Feb. 2012. <http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/155950.php>
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Visitor Opinions In Chronological Order (1)
The Care Giver May Become The Patient
posted by Joyce Hall on 2 Jul 2009 at 1:43 pmThe article about "Care Givers" is very important and everyone need to know how much of the entire person doing the Giving is consumed. I speak from experience having done caregiving myself. I know that as a care giver, our hearts are in the right place but really without proper training and constant help from other sources the Caregiver may become the Patient. The person giving never realizes how much of their time, energy, and patiences are necessary to carry out the daily tasks involved with caring full time for an older dependent adult patient.
The sad part of this problem is the "Caregiver is usually the one who realizes they are becoming ill, and can't do the caring anymore." When this reality hits, it is imparative that the situation be remedies quickly. The Caregiver must begin to get additional help with the Patient and process away from the situation on a regular basis. "Adult Day Care" is a wonderful alternative. One can only hope that the Patient will welcome the change too. Way too often society forgets about the "CareGiver" until it's too late and both the involved parties become in need of care...
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