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Support and
counseling helps Alzheimer’s caregivers
remain healthy
Newswise — Counseling
and support for people caring for a spouse
with Alzheimer’s disease helps to preserve
their health, according to a new study led
by Mary S. Mittelman, Dr.P.H., Research
Professor in the Department of Psychiatry at
New York University School of Medicine. The
study is published in the September 2007
issue of the American Journal of
Geriatric Psychiatry.
Spouses of people with
Alzheimer’s disease usually are older
adults. While people who take on the
caregiving role tend to be healthier than
those who do not, caring for someone with
Alzheimer’s disease is difficult in the best
of circumstances, and can take a toll on a
person’s health.
Caregivers in the study
who received an intervention developed at
NYU Medical Center by Dr. Mittelman and her
colleagues reported less of a decline in
their physical health than those receiving
usual care. “Preserving the health of spouse
caregivers through counseling and support
also benefits the person with Alzheimer’s
disease, as caregivers who are in poor
health are more likely to have difficulty
providing good care,” said Dr. Mittelman.
The study is the latest
result from ongoing research conducted over
the past 20 years by Dr. Mittelman. It is
the longest research study ever devoted to
testing an intervention to improve the
well-being of Alzheimer’s caregivers. The
study, which began in 1987, involved 406
spouse caregivers of people with Alzheimer’s
disease who were divided equally into two
groups. The first group received enhanced
counseling and support, including six
sessions of individual and family
counseling, support groups, and telephone
counseling for the caregiver and family
members as needed. The second group had
usual care, which meant that they received
information and help upon request, but
didn’t participate in formal counseling
sessions.
Previous results from
this study have shown that caregiver spouses
who received the enhanced counseling and
support delayed placing their ailing spouse
in a nursing home by 1½ years compared to
caregiver spouses who received usual care.
Dr. Mittelman and her colleagues also found
that counseling and support substantially
eases the depression of spouse caregivers.
The new results indicate that this
intervention can also help maintain the
physical health of caregivers.
In the new study, the
researchers gauged caregivers’ self-reported
health, an important predictor of physical
illness, with questions that have been used
widely in national surveys by the Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention, and
internationally by the World Health
Organization. The intervention had a
beneficial effect on self-rated health,
which began within four months of
enrollment, and lasted more than a year,
according to the study.
“Individualized
counseling programs that improve social
support for caregivers can have many
indirect benefits, including sustaining
their physical health,” said Dr. Mittelman.
The study was supported
by the National Institute of Mental Health,
the National Institute of Aging, the New
York University School of Medicine
Alzheimer’s Disease Center, and the Florida
Alzheimer’s Disease Research Center.
For more information about new programs for
caregivers or to enroll in future studies,
call the Psychosocial Research and Support
Program of the New York University School of
Medicine Silberstein Institute at
212.263.5728 or 212.263.5710.
The American Journal
of Geriatric Psychiatry is the official
journal of the American Association for
Geriatric Psychiatry and can be found online
at
http://www.AJGPonline.org.
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