2007
DOI: 10.3310/hta11150
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A systematic review of the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of different models of community-based respite care for frail older people and their carers

Abstract: The literature review provides some evidence that respite for carers of frail elderly people may have a small positive effect upon carers in terms of burden and mental or physical health. Carers were generally very satisfied with respite. No reliable evidence was found that respite either benefits or adversely affects care recipients, or that it delays entry to residential care. Economic evidence suggests that day care is at least as costly as usual care. Pilot studies are needed to inform full-scale studies o… Show more

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Cited by 92 publications
(116 citation statements)
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References 84 publications
(268 reference statements)
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“…As described, support for family caregivers is an important part of dementia care, and providing family caregivers with sufficient information and support was highlighted as one of WHO's five key principles for good dementia care (WHO, 2016a). The research describes respite initiatives as a supportive service provided in or outside the home to give the informal caregiver a temporary relief or break from caregiver duties (Mason et al, 2007;Neville, Beattie, Fielding & MacAndrew, 2015;Vandepitte et al, 2016 centres is classed as a type of residential-based respite. Respite care provided at institutions or day care centres is the most common form of respite for the elderly (Vandepitte et al, 2016).…”
Section: Support and Respite For Family Caregiversmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As described, support for family caregivers is an important part of dementia care, and providing family caregivers with sufficient information and support was highlighted as one of WHO's five key principles for good dementia care (WHO, 2016a). The research describes respite initiatives as a supportive service provided in or outside the home to give the informal caregiver a temporary relief or break from caregiver duties (Mason et al, 2007;Neville, Beattie, Fielding & MacAndrew, 2015;Vandepitte et al, 2016 centres is classed as a type of residential-based respite. Respite care provided at institutions or day care centres is the most common form of respite for the elderly (Vandepitte et al, 2016).…”
Section: Support and Respite For Family Caregiversmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Second, respite care can be defined as services providing a temporary break to caregivers and can be further distinguished into: community-based respite care (including in-home respite & host family respite) and residential respite care (including day care, temporary residential admission, and night-time care) [38,50].…”
Section: Study Classificationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Prevention of disability in frail older persons is seen as a priority for research in geriatrics (Ferrucci et al 2004) and can lead to the maintenance of quality of life and reduced health care costs (Cutler 2001). Several systematic reviews are available, which focus on specific categories of interventions for frail older persons, e.g., comprehensive geriatric assessment (Wieland 2003), after-care (Bours et al 1998), or respite care (Mason et al 2007). No overview is available, however, which provides an extensive overview of the content of the full range of existing programmes for community-living frail older persons that are aimed at the prevention of disability.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%