Department of Health, International University of La Rioja, Logroño, Spain.
Department of Neuroscience, University of the Basque Country, CIBER Salud Mental (CIBERSAM), Leioa, Spain.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2021 Jan 4;1(1):CD006440. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD006440.pub3.
Many people with dementia are cared for at home by unpaid informal caregivers, usually family members. Caregivers may experience a range of physical, emotional, financial and social harms, which are often described collectively as caregiver burden. The degree of burden experienced is associated with characteristics of the caregiver, such as gender, and characteristics of the person with dementia, such as dementia stage, and the presence of behavioural problems or neuropsychiatric disturbances. It is a strong predictor of admission to residential care for people with dementia. Psychoeducational interventions might prevent or reduce caregiver burden. Overall, they are intended to improve caregivers' knowledge about the disease and its care; to increase caregivers' sense of competence and their ability to cope with difficult situations; to relieve feelings of isolation and allow caregivers to attend to their own emotional and physical needs. These interventions are heterogeneous, varying in their theoretical framework, components, and delivery formats. Interventions that are delivered remotely, using printed materials, telephone or video technologies, may be particularly suitable for caregivers who have difficulty accessing face-to-face services because of their own health problems, poor access to transport, or absence of substitute care. During the COVID-19 pandemic, containment measures in many countries required people to be isolated in their homes, including people with dementia and their family carers. In such circumstances, there is no alternative to remote delivery of interventions.
To assess the efficacy and acceptability of remotely delivered interventions aiming to reduce burden and improve mood and quality of life of informal caregivers of people with dementia.
We searched the Specialised Register of the Cochrane Dementia and Cognitive Improvement Group, MEDLINE, Embase and four other databases, as well as two international trials registries, on 10 April 2020. We also examined the bibliographies of relevant review papers and published trials.
We included only randomised controlled trials that assessed the remote delivery of structured interventions for informal caregivers who were providing care for people with dementia living at home. Caregivers had to be unpaid adults (relatives or members of the person's community). The interventions could be delivered using printed materials, the telephone, the Internet or a mixture of these, but could not involve any face-to-face contact with professionals. We categorised intervention components as information, training or support. Information interventions included two key elements: (i) they provided standardised information, and (ii) the caregiver played a passive role. Support interventions promoted interaction with other people (professionals or peers). Training interventions trained caregivers in practical skills to manage care. We excluded interventions that were primarily individual psychotherapy. Our primary outcomes were caregiver burden, mood, health-related quality of life and dropout for any reason. Secondary outcomes were caregiver knowledge and skills, use of health and social care resources, admission of the person with dementia to institutional care, and quality of life of the person with dementia.
Study selection, data extraction and assessment of the risk of bias in included studies were done independently by two review authors. We used the Template for Intervention Description and Replication (TIDieR) to describe the interventions. We conducted meta-analyses using a random-effects model to derive estimates of effect size. We used GRADE methods to describe our degree of certainty about effect estimates.
We included 26 studies in this review (2367 participants). We compared (1) interventions involving training, support or both, with or without information (experimental interventions) with usual treatment, waiting list or attention control (12 studies, 944 participants); and (2) the same experimental interventions with provision of information alone (14 studies, 1423 participants). We downgraded evidence for study limitations and, for some outcomes, for inconsistency between studies. There was a frequent risk of bias from self-rating of subjective outcomes by participants who were not blind to the intervention. Randomisation methods were not always well-reported and there was potential for attrition bias in some studies. Therefore, all evidence was of moderate or low certainty. In the comparison of experimental interventions with usual treatment, waiting list or attention control, we found that the experimental interventions probably have little or no effect on caregiver burden (nine studies, 597 participants; standardised mean difference (SMD) -0.06, 95% confidence interval (CI) -0.35 to 0.23); depressive symptoms (eight studies, 638 participants; SMD -0.05, 95% CI -0.22 to 0.12); or health-related quality of life (two studies, 311 participants; SMD 0.10, 95% CI -0.13 to 0.32). The experimental interventions probably result in little or no difference in dropout for any reason (eight studies, 661 participants; risk ratio (RR) 1.15, 95% CI 0.87 to 1.53). In the comparison of experimental interventions with a control condition of information alone, we found that experimental interventions may result in a slight reduction in caregiver burden (nine studies, 650 participants; SMD -0.24, 95% CI -0.51 to 0.04); probably result in a slight improvement in depressive symptoms (11 studies, 1100 participants; SMD -0.25, 95% CI -0.43 to -0.06); may result in little or no difference in caregiver health-related quality of life (two studies, 257 participants; SMD -0.03, 95% CI -0.28 to 0.21); and probably result in an increase in dropouts for any reason (12 studies, 1266 participants; RR 1.51, 95% CI 1.04 to 2.20).
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: Remotely delivered interventions including support, training or both, with or without information, may slightly reduce caregiver burden and improve caregiver depressive symptoms when compared with provision of information alone, but not when compared with usual treatment, waiting list or attention control. They seem to make little or no difference to health-related quality of life. Caregivers receiving training or support were more likely than those receiving information alone to drop out of the studies, which might limit applicability. The efficacy of these interventions may depend on the nature and availability of usual services in the study settings.
许多痴呆症患者在家中由无偿的非正式照顾者照顾,通常是家庭成员。照顾者可能会经历一系列身体、情感、经济和社会伤害,这些伤害通常被统称为照顾者负担。所经历的负担程度与照顾者的特征有关,例如性别,以及与痴呆症患者的特征有关,例如痴呆症阶段,以及是否存在行为问题或神经精神障碍。这是痴呆症患者入住养老院的一个强有力的预测因素。心理教育干预措施可能预防或减轻照顾者负担。总的来说,它们旨在提高照顾者对疾病及其护理的认识;提高照顾者的能力和应对困难情况的能力;减轻孤立感,让照顾者能够照顾自己的身心健康需求。这些干预措施是多种多样的,其理论框架、组成部分和交付格式各不相同。通过远程方式提供的、使用印刷材料、电话或视频技术的干预措施,对于那些由于自身健康问题、交通不便或缺乏替代护理而难以获得面对面服务的照顾者来说,可能特别适用。在 COVID-19 大流行期间,许多国家都采取了隔离措施,要求人们居家隔离,包括痴呆症患者及其家庭照顾者。在这种情况下,只能通过远程方式提供干预措施。
评估远程提供的干预措施在减轻负担、改善痴呆症患者非正式照顾者的情绪和生活质量方面的效果和可接受性。
我们于 2020 年 4 月 10 日在 Cochrane 痴呆症和认知改善组的专业注册库、MEDLINE、Embase 和其他四个数据库以及两个国际试验注册库中进行了检索,还查阅了相关综述论文和已发表试验的参考文献。
我们仅纳入了评估在家中为痴呆症患者提供护理的无偿成年(亲属或患者社区成员)非正式照顾者的远程提供的结构化干预措施的随机对照试验。照顾者必须是通过使用印刷材料、电话、互联网或这些方式的组合来提供干预措施,但不能涉及与专业人员的任何面对面接触。我们将干预措施的组成部分归类为信息、培训或支持。信息干预措施包括两个关键要素:(i)它们提供标准化信息,(ii)照顾者发挥被动作用。支持干预措施促进与他人(专业人员或同行)的互动。培训干预措施培训照顾者管理护理的实际技能。我们排除了主要是个体心理治疗的干预措施。我们的主要结局是照顾者负担、情绪、健康相关生活质量和任何原因的退出。次要结局是照顾者知识和技能、卫生保健资源的使用、痴呆症患者入住机构护理、以及痴呆症患者的生活质量。
两名综述作者独立进行了研究选择、数据提取和纳入研究的偏倚风险评估。我们使用模板干预描述和复制(TIDieR)来描述干预措施。我们使用随机效应模型进行荟萃分析,以得出效应大小的估计值。我们使用 GRADE 方法来描述我们对效应估计值的确信程度。
我们纳入了 26 项研究(2367 名参与者)。我们将(1)涉及培训、支持或两者兼有,同时提供或不提供信息的干预措施(实验组)与常规治疗、等待名单或对照组(12 项研究,944 名参与者)进行了比较;和(2)相同的实验组与仅提供信息的组(14 项研究,1423 名参与者)进行了比较。我们根据研究局限性和一些研究之间的不一致性,对证据进行了降级。由于参与者对干预措施的主观结果进行自我评估,因此存在频繁的偏倚风险,这些参与者对干预措施并不盲目。随机分组方法报告得并不总是很清楚,一些研究中存在着潜在的失访偏倚。因此,所有证据的确定性均为中或低。在实验组与常规治疗、等待名单或对照组的比较中,我们发现实验组可能对照顾者负担(9 项研究,597 名参与者;标准化均数差(SMD)-0.06,95%置信区间(CI)-0.35 至 0.23)、抑郁症状(8 项研究,638 名参与者;SMD -0.05,95%CI -0.22 至 0.12)或健康相关生活质量(2 项研究,311 名参与者;SMD 0.10,95%CI -0.13 至 0.32)没有影响或影响很小。实验组可能对任何原因的退出(8 项研究,661 名参与者;风险比(RR)1.15,95%CI 0.87 至 1.53)没有影响或影响很小。在实验组与仅提供信息的对照组的比较中,我们发现实验组可能会轻微减轻照顾者负担(9 项研究,650 名参与者;SMD -0.24,95%CI -0.51 至 0.04)、可能会稍微改善抑郁症状(11 项研究,1100 名参与者;SMD -0.25,95%CI -0.43 至 -0.06)、可能对照顾者健康相关生活质量没有影响(2 项研究,257 名参与者;SMD -0.03,95%CI -0.28 至 0.21)、可能会增加任何原因的退出率(12 项研究,1266 名参与者;RR 1.51,95%CI 1.04 至 2.20)。
包括支持、培训或两者兼有的远程提供的干预措施,同时提供或不提供信息,与仅提供信息相比,可能会稍微减轻照顾者负担和改善照顾者的抑郁症状,但与常规治疗、等待名单或对照组相比则没有差异。它们对健康相关生活质量可能没有影响。与仅接受信息的照顾者相比,接受培训或支持的照顾者更有可能退出研究,这可能限制了适用性。这些干预措施的疗效可能取决于研究环境中常规服务的性质和可用性。