Training carers of stroke patients: randomised controlled trial

L Kalra, A Evans, I Perez, A Melbourn, A Patel… - Bmj, 2004 - bmj.com
L Kalra, A Evans, I Perez, A Melbourn, A Patel, M Knapp, N Donaldson
Bmj, 2004bmj.com
Background Informal care givers support disabled stroke patients at home but receive little
training for the caregiving role. Objective To evaluate the effectiveness of training care givers
in reducing burden of stroke in patients and their care givers. Design A single, blind,
randomised controlled trial. Setting Stroke rehabilitation unit. Subjects 300 stroke patients
and their care givers. Interventions Training care givers in basic nursing and facilitation of
personal care techniques. Main outcome measures Cost to health and social services …
Abstract
BackgroundInformal care givers support disabled stroke patients at home but receive little training for the caregiving role.
ObjectiveTo evaluate the effectiveness of training care givers in reducing burden of stroke in patients and their care givers.
DesignA single, blind, randomised controlled trial.
SettingStroke rehabilitation unit.
Subjects300 stroke patients and their care givers.
InterventionsTraining care givers in basic nursing and facilitation of personal care techniques.
Main outcome measuresCost to health and social services, caregiving burden, patients' and care givers' functional status (Barthel index, Frenchay activities index), psychological state (hospital anxiety and depression score), quality of life (EuroQol visual analogue scale) and patients' institutionalisation or mortality at one year.
ResultsPatients were comparable for age (median 76 years; interquartile range 70-82 years), sex (53% men), and severity of stroke (median Barthel index 8; interquartile range 4-12). The costs of care over one year for patients whose care givers had received training were significantly lower (£10 133 v£13 794 ($18 087 v$24 619; € 15 204 v€20 697); P = 0.001). Trained care givers experienced less caregiving burden (care giver burden score 32 v41; P = 0.0001), anxiety (anxiety score 3 v4; P = 0.0001) or depression (depression score 2 v3; P = 0.0001) and had a higher quality of life (EuroQol score 80 v70; P = 0.001). Patients' mortality, institutionalisation, and disability were not influenced by caregiver training. However, patients reported less anxiety (3 v4.5; P < 0.0001) and depression (3 v4; P < 0.0001) and better quality of life (65 v60; P = 0.009) in the caregiver training group.
ConclusionTraining care givers during patients' rehabilitation reduced costs and caregiver burden while improving psychosocial outcomes in care givers and patients at one year.
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