Alzheimer's disease (AD) is a progressive and degenerative condition affecting several cognitive areas, with a decline in functional abilities and behavioral changes. Objective: To investigate the association between neuropsychiatric symptoms in older adults with AD and caregiver burden and depression. Methods: A total of 134 family caregivers of older people diagnosed with AD answered a questionnaire with sociodemographic data and questions concerning the care context, neuropsychiatric symptoms, caregiver burden, and depressive symptoms. Results: Results revealed that 95% of older adults had at least one neuropsychiatric symptom, with the most common being: apathy, anxiety, and depression. Among the 12 neuropsychiatric symptoms investigated, 10 were significantly associated with caregiver burden, while 8 showed significant correlations with depressive symptoms. Conclusions: Neuropsychiatric symptoms were related to caregiver burden and depressive symptoms. In addition to the older adult with AD, the caregiver should receive care and guidance from the health team to continue performing quality work.
Overburdened caregivers and the use of dysfunctional management strategies are associated with a greater presence of neuropsychiatric symptoms in Alzheimer's disease patients. These aspects should be considered when developing interventions for caregivers to manage neuropsychiatric symptoms and overall treatment of patients with dementia. Geriatr Gerontol Int 2018; 18: 1177-1182.
Communication with patients with dementia may be a difficult task for caregivers.OBJECTIVE:The aim of this study was to produce a Brazilian transcultural adaptation of an
instrument developed in Canada, called the Small Communication Strategies Scale,
composed of 10 items constructed from 10 communicative strategies most recurrent
in a literature survey.METHODS:Drawing on understanding of the construction of the Small Communication Strategies
Scale (SCSS), a Brazilian Portuguese version of the instrument was devised through
the following steps: translation, back-translation and semantic-cultural
adaptation by a specialized linguist in English-Portuguese translations and
application of the comprehension test for the version produced in a group of
caregivers of elderly individuals with dementia.RESULTS:The transcultural equivalence process was performed and two items of the SCSS
needed adapting to the Brazilian context. After changes suggested by a specialized
linguist, the final version was applied to 34 caregivers and the transcultural
equivalence considered satisfactory.CONCLUSION:The Brazilian version of the instrument was successfully transculturally adapted
for future validation and application in Brazil.
This study aims to investigate the association between management and communication strategies and the presence of neuropsychiatric symptoms presented by elderly people with Alzheimer's disease. One hundred and thirty-four family caregivers answered a questionnaire with socio-demographic data and questions regarding the care context, the Small Communication Strategies Scale, the Dementia Management Strategy Scale, and the Neuropsychiatric Inventory. Caregivers used the criticism management strategy more when the elderly presented hallucination, agitation, depression, anxiety, irritability, nighttime behavior, and appetite abnormalities. The encouragement strategy was more significantly used only in the presence of euphoria/elation. The caregivers who used the most active management strategy were those who cared for the elderly with delirium, hallucination, agitation, depression, anxiety, irritability, and appetite and eating abnormalities. The use of communication strategies did not differ between groups with or without neuropsychiatric symptoms. It is concluded that criticism management and active management strategies are strongly associated with neuropsychiatric symptoms. The results of this study may be useful for planning treatment interventions that aim to modify the use of management strategies used by caregivers.
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