Back to Search Start Over

Living with a person who has parkinson's disease: The Spouse's perspective by stage of disease

Authors :
Julie H. Carter
Linda M. Winfield
Teri Malapira
Mary Pay
Ruth Barter
Lisa Gauger
Meg Lannon
Donna Amyot
Peggy Gray
Michael P. McDermott
Nita Gardiner
Kim Zoog
Barbara J. Stewart
Judi Erickson
Iku Inoue
Carol Demong
Elke Rost-Ruffner
Marsha Tennis
Judith Dobson
Jeana Jaglin
Jan Duff
Barbara Kiryluk
Patricia G. Archbold
Kathie Mistura
Paula Lewis
Kathy Wolfington-Shallow
Lisa Cornelius
Carol Sheldon
Bernice Kanigan
Source :
Movement Disorders. 13:20-28
Publication Year :
1998
Publisher :
Wiley, 1998.

Abstract

The objective of this study was to examine the experience of spouses caregiving for their spouse with Parkinson's disease (PD) and to determine whether their experiences differed by stage of disease. By using a cross-sectional design and mail questionnaire data from 380 spouse caregivers across 23 sites of the Parkinson Study Group, key caregiver variables were examined by stage of PD. Three categories of variables--caregiver role strain (10 measures), caregiver situation (four measures), and caregiver characteristics (four measures)--were analyzed by using t tests with Bonferroni correction. Specific types and amounts of role strain accumulated as the disease progressed, and they differed significantly between stages (p < 0.05). In the caregiving situation, the mean number of caregiving tasks tripled by stage 4/5. Negative changes in lifestyle plus decreases in predictability in caregivers' lives increased significantly in late-stage disease (p < 0.05). Caregiver characteristics of physical health and preparedness did not significantly differ across stages of disease. Depression was significantly higher by stage 4/5. Mutuality, the positive quality of the relationship as perceived by the caregiving spouse, declined beginning at stage 2. Caregiver strain is experienced across all stages of PD and accumulates significantly as the disease progresses. This study defines types and amounts of strain by stage of disease, which will be helpful in designing formal intervention trials to provide more effective help for spouse caregivers.

Details

ISSN :
15318257 and 08853185
Volume :
13
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Movement Disorders
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........141d86c026cc202fd269bc7cab65abaf