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Training family care givers of people with dementia to think in a more clinical manner decreased depression and the sense of burden

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QUESTION: Does training family care givers of individuals with dementia to view their role in a more clinical manner reduce adverse events associated with care giving?

Design

Randomised (allocation not concealed), blinded {outcome assessor}*, controlled trial with follow up 3 months after the intervention.

Setting

Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA.

Participants

117 family care giver – care receiver dyads, which consisted of primary informal care givers (mean age 77 y, 56% men; 94% were spouses or parents) of relatives with dementia that had not progressed beyond stage 7b of the Functional Assessment Staging (mean age 65 y, 70% women) who were living in community settings (ie, not nursing homes). 94 dyads (80%) were included in the analysis.

Intervention

72 care givers accompanied by ≥1 family member were allocated to the …

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Footnotes

  • Source of funding: National Institute of Nursing Research.

  • For correspondence: Dr K W Hepburn, Department of Family Practice, Mayo Mail Code 381, 420 Delaware Street SE, Minneapolis, MN 55455, USA. Fax +1 612 625 0916.