Artigo Revisado por pares

Overestimation of hours dedicated to family caregiving of persons with heart failure

2018; Wiley; Volume: 74; Issue: 10 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1111/jan.13727

ISSN

1365-2648

Autores

Eva Timonet‐Andreu, José Carlos Canca‐Sánchez, Juana María Sepúlveda-Sánchez, Celia Ortiz‐Tomé, Francisco Rivas‐Ruiz, Juan Carlos Toribio‐Toribio, Ana Mora‐Banderas, José Miguel Morales‐Asencio,

Tópico(s)

Family Caregiving in Mental Illness

Resumo

Abstract Aims The aim of this study is to profile the family caregivers of people living with heart failure, to determine the perceived and real time devoted to daily care and to identify the factors associated with caregivers’ overestimation of time dedicated to care. Background The time spent by family caregivers on daily care is related to overload, but there are differences between real and perceived time spent. The reason for this difference is unknown, as is its impact on the caregiver. Design Multicentre, cross‐sectional study. Methods This study forms part of a longitudinal, multicentre, ambispective cohort investigation. The study population was composed of 478 patient–family caregiver dyads and the data were collected over 2 years from 2014 ‐ 2016. Results The mean time perceived to be spent on daily care was 8.79 hr versus a real value of 4.41 hr. These values were positively correlated. A significant correlation was also found between the overestimation of hours spent and the age of the caregiver, the duration of the caregiving relationship and the number of people providing support and with the patient's level of dependence and self‐care. Conclusion The overestimation of time dedicated to care seems to be related to patients’ and caregivers’ characteristics, such as functional status, caregiver burden, age and cohabitation. These patterns should be considered by nurses when carrying out assessment and care planning with these patients and their caregivers.

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