COPING IN FAMILY SUPPORTERS OF ELDERLY PEOPLE WITH DEMENTIA

Citation
Kj. Mckee et al., COPING IN FAMILY SUPPORTERS OF ELDERLY PEOPLE WITH DEMENTIA, British journal of clinical psychology, 36, 1997, pp. 323-340
Citations number
33
Categorie Soggetti
Psycology, Clinical
ISSN journal
01446657
Volume
36
Year of publication
1997
Part
3
Pages
323 - 340
Database
ISI
SICI code
0144-6657(1997)36:<323:CIFSOE>2.0.ZU;2-L
Abstract
Research into supporters of elderly people with. dementia has a brief but significant history. Initially research sought to establish the na ture and extent of the distress that supporters endured in the fulfilm ent of their caring role. More recently researchers have turned their attention towards the identification of coping techniques used by supp orters in the community. The Dundee Study of Supporters and Dementia i s concerned with factors associated with the maintenance and care of t he demented elderly in the community, and with the impact of dementia on family supporters. A total of 228 family supporters of community-re sident elderly (50 per cent of elders with dementia, 50 per cent witho ut) were interviewed. Part of the interview focused on self-reported c oping, and identified coping strategies using open-ended questions and a revised, 31-item Ways of Coping checklist. Findings indicated that the majority of supporters of community-resident elderly relatives rep orted coping well. Supporters predominantly used emotion-focused copin g strategies as their main way of coping. However, those supporters wh o reported using a problem-focused strategy were found to score better on measures of coping than those supporters using an emotion-focused strategy The supporters' main coping strategy was not associated with characteristics of the elder-supporter dyad. Factors derived from the Ways of Coping checklist produced a pattern of associations with chara cteristics of the elder-supporter dyad, but the same factors were larg ely not associated with other measures of coping. The implications of the findings are discussed with regard to coping research, and for int erventions to improve the well-being of supporters of an elderly relat ive with dementia in the community.