
Psychiatric News July 16, 2004
Volume 39 Number 14
© 2004 American Psychiatric Association
p. 32
For Alzheimer's Patients, Life May Be Better Than Caretakers Think
Joan Arehart-Treichel
Could the reason for the differing perceptions be that the caretakers
feel so burdened?
It may come as a surprise, but it looks as though Alzheimer's patients who
are mild-to-moderately severely ill can assess the quality of their lives
better than their caretakers can.
Past studies have determined that Alzheimer's patients with
mild-to-moderate dementia can accurately report their quality of life in many
domains. And now a new study has found that caretakers of dementia patients
generally rate the patients' quality of life lower than the patients
themselves do, and the reason, it appears, is not that the patients lack the
mental capacity to assess their own quality of life, but rather that the
caretakers feel overburdened.
In this new study, reported in the June American Journal of Geriatric
Psychiatry, Kristine Yaffe, M.D., a psychiatrist at the University of
California, San Francisco, and coworkers had 91 patients with
mild-to-moderately severe dementia rate themselves on their quality of life
with the Dementia Quality of Life Questionnaire. That is, the patients had to
report how often they felt happy, hopeful, and useful; how often they felt
lonely, depressed, nervous, anxious, frustrated, embarrassed, and lonely; how
often they found something that made them laugh or laugh with others; and how
often they obtained pleasure from watching animals, listening to music, and so
on.
Each patient's primary caretaker rated him or her in the same way, using
the same instrument. Patients were also administered the Mini-Mental State
Exam and the Geriatric Depression Scale, and caregivers also completed a
Caregiver Burden Questionnaire and questions about how often patients were
hostile or aggressive, sought attention, or engaged in sexually inappropriate
behaviors.
The researchers then compared how the patients had rated themselves on
quality of life with how their caretakers had done so and found that there was
little agreement. The caretakers generally rated the patients' quality of life
lower than the patients themselves had done.
To find out why, the investigators used results from the Mini-Mental State
Exam, Geriatric Depression Scale, Caregiver Burden Questionnaire, and other
questions caretakers had answered.
The reason, it turned out, is not that the patients lacked the mental
capacity to assess their own quality of life, but rather that the caretakers
felt burdened. In other words, it looks as though the caregivers had
transferred their feelings about their own poor quality of life to the
patients.
"When assessing subjective quality of life in patients with
mild-to-moderate dementia, patients should be directly assessed because
burdened caregivers are likely to underrate the quality of life of their
relative with dementia," Yaffe and her colleagues concluded.
The study was financed by the Alzheimer's Association.
The study, "What Explains Differences Between Dementia
Patients' and Their Caregivers' Ratings of Patients' Quality of Life?,"
is posted online at
<http://ajgp.psychiatryonline.org/cgi/content/full/12/3/272>.
Am J Geriatr Psychiatry 2004 12 272[Abstract/Free Full Text]
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