Publication | Closed Access
Psychosocial factors associated with the use/non-use of mental health services by primary carers of individuals with dementia
13
Citations
24
References
1998
Year
The study investigated psychosocial factors associated with the use/non-use of services by primary carers of people with dementia (caring for relative/friend with dementia). The factors considered were individual differences, health, stress, family/social support, years of caring, age of carers/person with dementia, gender and level of behavioural disturbance presented by the person with dementia. The participants were referred to the study by health services, social services representatives and GPs. The carers (N = 50) were divided into two groups (service user/non-user). The findings indicated that primary carers in the non-user service group scored significantly higher on a measure (sense of coherence; SOC) estimating an individual's ability to deal with stressful situations. The individual's ability to deal with caring responsibilities was associated with a reduction in the level of diagnosable psychiatric disorder or 'caseness' and the non-use of services. None of the other factors considered were found to be significantly different between the two career groups. However, a significant inverse association between health, stress and individual ability to deal with stressful situations was found when the two career groups were combined.
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