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Does being a retired or employed caregiver affect the association between behaviours in Alzheimer’s disease and caregivers’ health-related quality-of-life?

Abstract

Objective

We examined whether caregivers’ employment status (i.e., retired or employed) might modify the association between the behaviours of persons with Alzheimer’s disease (PwAD) and caregivers’ health-related quality-of-life (HRQoL). Data came from a cross-sectional study of the primary informal caregivers of 200 persons with mild or moderate Alzheimer’s disease. Caregivers completed the EQ-5D-3L to rate their HRQoL and generate health utility scores, and the Dementia Behaviour Disturbance Scale (DBDS) to assess the degree to which PwAD exhibited each of 28 behaviours. Caregivers’ health utility scores were regressed on overall DBDS scores, with caregiver employment status (retired, employed) treated as an effect modifier and confounder in separate regression models. We also controlled for age, sex, income, education, caregivers’ relationship to the PwAD, and whether caregivers gave up paid employment/cut down working hours to care for PwAD.

Results

Effect modification by caregiver employment status is possible, with the inverse association between DBDS score and health utility score largely existing for retired versus employed caregivers. Research using larger samples and longitudinal data would further inform this area of inquiry.

Introduction

Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is characterized by cognitive decline that disrupts the capacity to think, understand, remember and communicate information [1]. Global projections suggest more than one million cases of AD will occur by 2038 [2]. No cure exists for AD [3].

Although the clinical presentation of the disease varies, 80% of persons with AD (PwAD) can expect to exhibit multiple behavioural disturbances over time [4], including apathy, depression, aggression, anxiety, and sleep disorder [5]. These behaviours can adversely affect PwAD lifestyles and management, and caregiver health [6,7,8].

Caregiver health is important because PwAD receive much of their care at home and the onus of care provision generally falls on primary informal caregivers [1], typically spouses or adult children [9]. Caregiving for PwAD is a physically and emotionally challenging role, especially as the disease progresses and caregivers devote more time to meeting their loved ones’ basic needs and less time to their own interests [10]. The demands of caring for PwAD impact caregivers’ health, well-being, and health-related quality-of-life (HRQoL) [11] to the point where caregivers are called the “hidden victims” [12] or “secondary patients” [1] of AD. Evidence suggests the behavioural disturbances associated with AD have more impact on caregiver health than PwAD’s cognitive impairment [13].

Understanding the factors affecting PwAD behaviours and caregiver health is important given the crucial role of caregivers in managing AD. We undertook this study to examine whether caregiver employment status (retired versus employed full- or part-time) would modify the association between PwAD’s behavioural disturbances and caregiver HRQoL. Caregivers cover many of the costs of caring out of their own pockets. Retired caregivers who live on fixed incomes may be less able than employed caregivers to absorb these costs or seek relief through respite care or daycare programs, thereby amplifying the effects of their loved ones’ behavioural challenges on HRQoL. To date, no other study has examined the role of caregiver employment status in this area.

Main text

Methods

This study included 200 primary informal caregivers of persons with mild or moderate AD. These individuals were initially recruited to assess the willingness-to-pay for AD medications in a study led by one of the authors (MO) [14]. Recruitment took place in nine memory and geriatric clinics across Canada between November 2008 and August 2011. The investigators selected these clinics because they were based in research-intensive academic settings with extensive aging-related research programs, which promoted recruitment and attention to study rigour. Further details about recruitment and the study process are available elsewhere [14].

Eligible caregivers had to be retired or employed full- or part-time, be the primary informal (unpaid) caregiver, and be fluent in English or French. We excluded caregivers who reported their employment status as student, homemaker, or unemployed, who cared for someone with severe AD, or who cared for someone who could not give informed consent.

Through an in-person questionnaire, administered by trained interviewers, caregivers completed the Dementia Behaviour Disturbance Scale (DBDS) [15], which assessed the presence and intensity of 28 different PwAD behaviours on a 5-point Likert scale (0 = never, 4 = all of the time). The responses were summed to determine an overall behaviour disturbance score ranging from 0 (no disturbance) to 112 (maximum disturbance).

Caregivers also completed a generic HRQoL instrument called the EQ-5D-3L [16], which asks respondents to report their health status on each of five dimensions (mobility, self-care, usual activities, pain/discomfort, anxiety/depression). Three response options are available per dimension (no problems, some/moderate problems, extreme problems/unable to do). A Canadian algorithm converted EQ-5D-3L responses into health utility scores ranging from 0 (equivalent to death) to 1 (equivalent to perfect health) [17].

The study questionnaire also asked participants about their sex, employment status, relationship to the PwAD, type and length of care provided, satisfaction with caregiving, and level of AD knowledge [18].

For sample characteristics, the continuous variables were summarized using medians and 25th/75th percentiles and the categorical variables were summarized using frequencies. We compared sample characteristics between retired and employed caregivers using the Mann–Whitney U test for continuous variables and the Chi square or Fisher exact test for categorical variables.

We regressed caregivers’ health utility scores on DBDS scores using ordinary least squares regression and nonparametric bootstrap estimated standard errors (1000 bootstrap samples), which yielded bias corrected and accelerated confidence intervals. The initial regression model contained only DBDS score. Additional models included employment status (retired versus employed) and an interaction term (DBDS × employment status). We also constructed a full model containing DBDS score, employment status, the interaction term, and the sample characteristics that were statistically significantly different between retired and employed caregivers (Table 1).

Table 1 Sample characteristics (n = 200)

We used multiple imputation by chained equations to account for missing values on three sample characteristics (age, relationship to PwAD, income) in the full regression model. The imputation dataset included all of the variables in the full model, with predictive mean matching to impute for age and the multinomial logit model to impute for relationship and income. The process created five imputed datasets, which were combined to obtain a new set of regression coefficients for the full model. Prior to imputation, graphical assessment showed the missing values to be missing completely at random.

We used R v3.4.1 (R Foundation for Statistical Computing, Vienna, Austria) to conduct the statistical analysis; the criterion for statistical significance was α = 0.05.

Results

The sample included 140 retired caregivers, 5% of whom reported giving up paid work or reducing work hours to care for PwAD in the time prior to retirement. Many of the retired caregivers were spousal caregivers (86%), with the remaining 14% being either adult children, friends, or other relatives. Sixty caregivers reported working full-time (62%) or part-time (38%). Half of the employed caregivers gave up paid work or reduced work hours to care for their loved ones. Seventy percent of the employed caregivers were either adult children or other relatives, with the remainder being spousal caregivers (30%). Table 1 compares sample characteristics between retired and employed caregivers.

Median health utility scores were 0.80 for retired caregivers and 0.84 for employed caregivers (p = 0.02); both sets of scores were left skewed (Fig. 1). Median DBDS scores were 16 for retired and 19 for employed caregivers (p = 0.35) (Fig. 1).

Fig. 1
figure 1

Distribution of health utility scores in retired and employed caregivers and distribution of Dementia Behaviour Disturbance Scale scores in retired and employed caregivers. Grey colour is employed caregivers overlaid on retired caregivers

The interaction term for DBDS and employment status was not statistically significant in the full regression model nor the model containing only DBDS and employment status (Table 2). The interaction term’s regression coefficient was the same (i.e., − 0.003) in both models, as was the upper bound of the 95% confidence interval (CI) (i.e., 0.000).

Table 2 Regression analysis: caregiver health utility scores regressed on Dementia Behaviour Disturbance Scale score and caregiver employment status

For DBDS, the regression coefficient in all four models suggested a small inverse association between AD behaviours and caregivers’ HRQoL. The addition of covariates to the model diminished, but did not entirely eliminate, the behaviour-HRQoL association. Caregiver employment status was not a confounder because adding it to the model with DBDS alone did not change the regression coefficient for DBDS.

In the full model, the regression coefficients for DBDS and the interaction term between DBDS and employment status did not change following multiple imputation. The coefficient for employment status in the full model changed from 0.101 (complete case analysis) to 0.088 (multiple imputation), a reduction of 12.9%.

Discussion

While the regression coefficient for the interaction between DBDS and employment status was not statistically significant, the upper bound of the 95% CI did not exceed the null value. Thus, we cannot dismiss the possibility of effect modification outright (see “Limitations” below). If effect modification were to exist, then the inverse relation between behaviour and HRQoL would be stronger for retired versus employed caregivers. Based on the full regression model, the effect of DBDS on health utility score is − 0.0033 for retired caregivers (i.e., − 0.0003 + [− 0.003 × 1]) and − 0.0003 for employed caregivers (i.e., − 0.0003 + [− 0.003 × 0]). Since retired caregivers are probably at home more often than employed caregivers, and also less likely to be able to afford paid services such as respite care, retired caregivers have a greater chance of being exposed to difficult PwAD behaviours. Additionally, retired caregivers might experience more health challenges of their own compared to employed caregivers, simply because they are older. This can compound the experience of dealing with difficult behaviours and exacerbate HRQoL deficits.

The findings suggest a moderate effect size for retired caregivers. Recent work on the EQ-5D-5L [19], which has two additional response options per dimension compared to the -3L, reported a change in health utility score of 0.037 to be clinically important [20]. The DBDS score for a retired caregiver would have to increase by 11.22 points to produce a reduction in health utility score of 0.037 points, assuming effect modification by employment status (− 0.037 = − 0.0033 × 11.22). This degree of change is possible for retired caregivers, as evidenced by the interquartile range of DBDS scores, which exceeded 11.22 points. For employed caregivers, the effect is negligible because a 124-point increase in DBDS score would be required to reduce the health utility score by 0.037 points (− 0.0372 = − 0.0003 × 124). However, the maximum DBDS score is 112.

Conclusion

No previous study has examined the effect of employment status on PwAD behaviours and informal caregiver HRQoL. The inverse association between these behaviours and caregiver HRQoL largely exists among retired caregivers. This novel finding suggests the need for policy makers to consider programs directed specifically at retired caregivers to provide relief from the burden of caregiving, e.g., tax deductions to reduce taxable income by the amount of paid respite care.

Limitations

Many of the regression coefficients were not statistically significant, although the upper bounds of the 95% CIs either touched or slightly exceeded the null value of 0. This suggests the study was underpowered to detect changes in health utility scores. The study was also cross-sectional, meaning we could not assume changes in health utility scores would follow changes in PwAD behaviours. Future research should examine this topic longitudinally in larger samples. The study sample over-represented highly educated, high income caregivers, which suggests caution when applying the results to all caregivers.

Abbreviations

AD:

Alzheimer’s disease

CI:

confidence interval

DBDS:

Dementia Behaviour Disturbance Scale

HRQoL:

health-related quality-of-life

PwAD:

persons with Alzheimer’s disease

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Authors’ contributions

MM and MO drafted the manuscript and conducted the statistical analysis. MO conceptualized the study. Both authors read and approved the final manuscript.

Acknowledgements

The authors thank the study participants and recruiting physicians for their efforts in making data collection possible.

Competing interests

The authors declare that they have no competing interests.

Availability of data and materials

The datasets generated and/or analyzed during the current study are not publicly available due to the fact that the original research ethics board approvals did not include provisions for said availability. The data are available from the corresponding author on reasonable request.

Consent for publication

Not applicable.

Ethics approval and consent to participate

The following research ethics boards approved the study:

  1. 1.

    Human Investigation Committee, Faculty of Medicine, Memorial University (08.102);

  2. 2.

    Office of Research Ethics, McGill University Health Centre (08-004);

  3. 3.

    Comité d’éthique de la recherche, Institut universitaire de gériatrie de Montréal (09-10-1201);

  4. 4.

    Office of Research Services, Queen’s University (DMED-1150-08);

  5. 5.

    Research Ethics Office, Sunnybrooke Health Sciences Centre (306-2009);

  6. 6.

    Hamilton Health Sciences Research Ethics Board, McMaster University (08-179);

  7. 7.

    Research Ethics Board, St. Joseph’s Healthcare Hamilton (08-3006);

  8. 8.

    Health Sciences Research Ethics Board, University of Western Ontario (16989E);

  9. 9.

    Conjoint Health Research Ethics Board, Office of Medical Bioethics, University of Calgary (22015); and

  10. 10.

    Behavioural Research Ethics Board, University of British Columbia (H08-01438).

All participants gave written informed consent to participate in the study.

Funding

Data analysis for this manuscript was supported by the RBC Research Undergraduate Fellowship Program at the University of Waterloo. Data collection was supported by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (Grant Number: MOP 86487). The funders played no role in the design of the study and in the collection, analysis, and interpretation of data, nor in writing the manuscript.

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Correspondence to Mark Oremus.

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Majoni, M., Oremus, M. Does being a retired or employed caregiver affect the association between behaviours in Alzheimer’s disease and caregivers’ health-related quality-of-life?. BMC Res Notes 10, 766 (2017). https://doi.org/10.1186/s13104-017-3099-2

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