Next Article in Journal
Stepwise Interactive Situated Training Program for Young Nurses’ Safety Behavior and Interrupted Coping Behavior
Next Article in Special Issue
Informal Caregivers’ Experiences with Performing Telemonitoring in Heart Failure Care at Home—A Qualitative Study
Previous Article in Journal
Last Aid Course—The Slovenian Experience
Previous Article in Special Issue
How Is Quality of Care in Home Healthcare Created? A Qualitative Study of Health Professionals’ Perspectives
 
 
Font Type:
Arial Georgia Verdana
Font Size:
Aa Aa Aa
Line Spacing:
Column Width:
Background:
Article

Rural Family Caregiving: A Closer Look at the Impacts of Health, Care Work, Financial Distress, and Social Loneliness on Anxiety

1
Division of Care of the Elderly, Department of Family Medicine, University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB T5G 2T4, Canada
2
School of Kinesiology and Health Studies, Queen’s University, Kingston, ON K7L 3N6, Canada
3
Alberta Health Services, Edmonton, AB T5G 0B7, Canada
4
Medically At-Risk Driver Centre, University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB T5G 2T4, Canada
5
Department of Pediatrics, University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB T5G 2T4, Canada
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Healthcare 2022, 10(7), 1155; https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare10071155
Submission received: 6 May 2022 / Revised: 13 June 2022 / Accepted: 16 June 2022 / Published: 21 June 2022
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Home Health Care for the Future)

Abstract

:
Even before the COVID-19 pandemic, earlier acute care patient discharges, restricted admissions to long-term care, and reduced home care services increased the amount and complexity of family caregivers’ care work. However, much less is known about rural caregivers’ experiences. Thus, our aim in this sequential mixed-methods study was to understand how COVID-19 affected rural family caregivers. Thematically analyzed interviews and linear regression on survey data were used to understand family caregiver stress. Fourteen rural caregivers participated in interviews. They acknowledged that they benefitted from the circle of support in rural communities; however, they all reported having to cope with fewer healthcare and social services. 126 rural caregivers participated in the online survey. About a third (31%) of these caregivers had moderate frailty, indicating that they could benefit from support to improve their health. In linear regression, frailty, social loneliness, financial hardship, and younger age were associated with caregiver anxiety. Contrary to the qualitative reports that people in rural communities are supportive, over two-thirds of the rural caregivers completing the survey were socially lonely. Rural family caregivers are vulnerable to anxiety and social loneliness due to the nature of caregiving and the lack of healthcare and social service supports in rural areas. Primary healthcare and home care teams are well-positioned to assess caregivers’ health and care situation as well as to signpost them to needed supports that are available in their areas.

1. Introduction

Family caregivers are critical to home care. They provide 75–90% of the care to people living in the community [1,2,3] and assist with 10–30% of the care in congregate care settings such as lodges, assisted or supportive living, and long-term care [4]. Family caregivers are particularly important in rural areas. Statistics Canada defines rural as “all territory lying outside population centres” which includes small towns, villages with less than 1000 population, as well as agricultural, undeveloped, and non-developable lands [5]. Rural settings are seen as good places to grow old because of the abundance of friendly social support [6,7]. Yet rural populations generally experience significant disparities in health and healthcare resources. Disparity implies a setting in which social, economic, or environmental disadvantages contribute to inequitable outcomes [8]. Rural older adults are significantly more likely than urban residents to have functional impairments and mental and chronic illnesses [9,10] and have fewer healthcare resources [8,11]. Services such as specialist physician services, respite, and rehabilitation may not be available in rural and remote environments [12]. There may also be fewer social and community services [8,11]. It is often necessary for rural residents to travel long distances to access both health and social services [13], yet the absence of public transportation in rural settings can make access to services difficult for non-drivers [13,14].
Rurality also has an impact on family caregivers. While rates of loneliness and social isolation are higher for family caregivers than their non-caregiving counterparts [15,16], geographically-isolated rural caregivers are at higher risk [17]. Small and dispersed populations are barriers to health and social service provision [18,19]. In a study comparing rural and urban caregivers of people living with dementia, rural caregivers reported few formal healthcare supports compared to urban caregivers and greater reliance on informal supports [12]. Hence, family caregivers in rural communities are more likely to rely on family, friends, and neighbors for support. Younger family members, however, often move to urban areas for education or employment, which reduces the availability of day-to-day support [20].
COVID-19 exposed and exacerbated existing challenges [21]. Social distancing and isolating at home were effective at reducing the risk of COVID-19 infection; however, they increased loneliness and anxiety [22,23,24] and decreased social support [21,25]. Social support refers to emotional, informational, affirmational, or practical support provided by family, friends, and professionals and is a recognized external resource that can buffer the influence of stressors and bolster internal resources [26,27]. Premature patient discharges, restricted admissions to long-term care, and reduced home care services during COVID-19 increased the amount and complexity of family caregivers’ care work [22,23,24]. However, much less is known about rural caregivers’ experiences [6,28]. Thus, our aim in this study was to understand how COVID-19 has affected rural family caregivers.

2. Methods

2.1. Design

This sequential mixed-methods study comprised of four components: (1) an exploratory mixed-methods online survey of the impacts of COVID-19 on family caregivers 4 months after the declaration of a pandemic (21 June to 21 July 2020), (2) interviews (1 February to 30 April 2021) with a convenience sample of rural family caregivers who participated in the 2020 online survey, and (3) a mixed-methods online survey of family caregivers after 18 months of the COVID-19 pandemic (21 June to 31 August 2021). Here we report on the interviews and quantitative data from the 2021 survey. The results of the 2020 survey are reported elsewhere [29,30].
We used a qualitative interpretive approach [31,32] for the interviews. Interpretive description is a well-established methodological approach that is designed to understand and then inform the contextual nature of human behavior and health/social care practice. This approach was used to (1) provide an in-depth understanding of the experiences of rural family caregivers during the first year of the pandemic, including what supports and services they needed due to the pandemic, (2) inform the survey planned for July 2021, and (3) generate results to inform clinical practice [33].
In the cross-sectional online 2021 survey quantitative data, we were particularly interested if extra care work and social isolation, which seemed common in the COVID-19 pandemic, were correlated with caregivers’ anxiety and poor health. Ethics approval was granted by the health research ethics board [PRO-00097996]. All data were collected with informed consent from caregivers.

2.2. Setting

This study was conducted in the province of Alberta, Canada. Alberta is the fourth most populous province of Canada, with an estimated population of 4.08 million in 2021 [34]. One in four people are family caregivers. Educational and income levels are high—55 percent of Albertans aged 25 to 64 have completed a post-secondary program. The average annual income is $80,449 [34]. According to the 2021 census, 14.8% of the population are 65 years of age and older (629,220 Albertans). About 19% of Albertans live in rural areas.

2.3. Participants and Recruitment

Convenience sampling was used for both the interviews and the follow-up survey. Eligibility criteria included, (1) a family caregiver (carer, care partner) defined as any person who takes on a generally unpaid caring role providing emotional, physical, or practical support in response to another person’s disability, mental illness, drug or alcohol dependency, chronic condition, dementia, terminal or serious illness, frailty from ageing, or COVID-19, and (2) lives in Alberta. A rural living situation was determined by participant’s postal code. Participants were not compensated for their time.

2.3.1. Qualitative Interviews

Sixteen rural caregivers who completed a survey in July 2020 on the impacts of COVID-19 and indicated a willingness to participate in an interview about their experiences were invited by email to participate in individual interviews. All responded to the email invitation from the second author with agreement to be interviewed and were sent the information letter about the research and interviews. Two caregivers declined after the interviews were arranged, one because the care-receiver passed away and the other because the care-receiver was very ill. The interviews were conducted from February to April 2021 on Zoom or by telephone, depending on participants’ preference. Participants provided verbal consent and consent for the interview to be recorded before data collection began. Interviews were digitally recorded and averaged one hour in length (45–75 min).

2.3.2. Quantitative Survey

We emailed and mailed information about the survey, posters, and e-posters to health and community organizations who interact with family caregivers so they could invite family caregivers who lived in rural Alberta to participate in this study. We also advertised on social media (Twitter, LinkedIn, Facebook). The survey was delivered online via the secure REDCap data collection platform from 21 June to 31 August 2021. 126 participants completing the survey had rural postal codes.

2.4. Data Collection

Qualitative interviews. A Ph.D-trained qualitative interviewer conducted all the interviews. A semi-structured interview guide was used to elicit participants’ views of how caregiving changed or remained the same during the pandemic, what was or might have been done to support them and the person(s) they cared for, and what they needed to support their caregiving in the future (Supplementary File S1: Semi-structured interview guide).
Quantitative Survey. The open survey consisted of 30 closed questions (Likert scale/yes/no, list) and five open-ended questions. The questionnaire was reviewed by the research team and then the online version was tested by five family caregivers. Participants were informed that their responses were voluntary, and they could skip questions they did not wish to answer. The survey consisted of four main sections: (1) care work, (2) caregiver health (frailty, changes in physical and mental health, anxiety, social loneliness), (3) stressors (finances, navigation), and (4) demographics (of both caregiver and care-receiver). The full survey can be found in the Supplementary Materials (File S2, Survey). The following measures were analyzed for this study.
Care work. Family caregivers, who were caring before COVID-19, were asked whether care work increased, remained stable, or decreased. We assessed the number of hours devoted to care work pre-COVID-19 with the following options ≤1 h, 2–9 h, 10 h, 11–20 h, 21–39 h and 40+ h. Based on the evidence that anxiety rises with care time over 20 h per week [35], we dichotomized care work to ≤20 and ≥21.
Frailty. We used a self-report version [36] of the Clinical Frailty Scale [CFS] [37,38] to assess frailty. The CFS is validated for in-person frailty screening based on clinical judgment [38], but adaptations are allowed for self-report assessments of frailty [36]. Rockwood [38] defines frailty as the “term widely used to denote a multidimensional syndrome of loss of reserves (energy, physical ability, cognition, health) that gives rise to vulnerability”. The primary reason for congregate-care admission is the failing of the caregiver’s health. We reasoned that screening for frailty could enable health promotion and frailty care to maintain the caregiver’s own health. Nine CFS questions were asked to assess older adults’ frailty levels (See File S3: Self Report Clinical Frailty Scale) [36]. As recommended in other studies, we divided scores into three groups: CFS 1–3 fit; CFS 4–6 vulnerable with mild to moderate frailty; and CFS 7–9 severe frailty [39].
Changes in health. Caregivers were asked if their physical and mental health had changed in the last year (improved, remained the same, deteriorated).
Stressors. We asked about self-rated financial difficulty (none, a few, moderate, a lot) and confidence to navigate health and community systems to access needed services (not at all, a little, neutral, somewhat, very, don’t know). We dichotomized these as no difficulty/confident and difficulty/not confident for some analysis.
Anxiety. Anxiety was assessed with the six-item State Anxiety Scale [40]. It is a validated short form of the State Trait Anxiety Inventory [STAI]. The long and short forms are designed to measure the feelings of apprehension, tension, nervousness, and worry. Family caregivers were asked to respond to questions such as “I feel comfortable” or “I feel good” on a four-choice Likert scale (“not at all” to “very much”). Items 1, 3, and 6 are positively worded (absence of anxiety) and reversed scored). The final score was obtained by adding the scores for each item together and then multiplying the total score by 20/6. STAI scores range from 20–80, with higher scores indicating more severe symptoms. The 6-item versions have been found to be as reliable and valid as the original 20-item version [40,41,42]. Cronbach alphas range from 0.74 to 0.82 [40]. In this survey, Cronbach’s alpha pre-COVID-19 was 0.85, and post-COVID-19, it was 0.89. We dichotomized the STAI scores using cut-point scores of <40 to indicate no or minimal symptoms and ≥41 to indicate the presence of moderate or severe symptoms.
Social loneliness. The experience of social loneliness is related to the perception of the absence of a broader social network. We used the three-item DeJong–Gierveld social loneliness scale [43,44]. The three positively worded items, “There are plenty of people I can lean on in case of trouble”, “There are plenty of people I can count on completely”, and “There are enough people I feel close to” are rated on a scale of no, more or less, or yes. The no and more or less are scored as 1, socially lonely, and yes is scored as 0, not socially lonely. Scores range from 1 to 3. In a large sample from 7 countries, the 3-item DeJong–Gierveld social loneliness scale had good internal consistency, the Cronbach’s alpha was 0.85 [44]. In the current rural sample, Cronbach’s alpha coefficient was 0.89.

2.5. Data Analysis

Qualitative data. Interviews were transcribed verbatim. The interviewer listened to the recordings and corrected mistakes and removed identifying information in the transcripts. The interviews were imported into NVIVO for ease of data management. We analyzed the data thematically, as suggested by Thorne [31,32]. Thematic analysis is a flexible qualitative method used to explore the different perspectives held by research participants; it highlights the similarities and divergences in their viewpoints and generates thematic insights [45].
We methodically followed Braun and Clarke’s [45,46,47,48] six stages of analysis (see File S4: Stages of Thematic Analysis). Reflexive Thematic Analysis creates themes that highlight nuanced, contextualized patterns of meaning [47]. To become familiar with the data and to generate first impressions of meaning (stage one), two members of the research team independently read participants’ responses and made notes of their impressions in memos in NVIVO. In stage two, members of the research team worked separately to inductively generate initial open codes. In stage three, team members worked together to generate categories. Patterns within the open codes were identified and codes with similar attributes and meanings were grouped. The categories were then refined into preliminary themes (stage four) using critical questions such as “what is happening here”, and “what is being said here”, and “why”? At stage four, we discussed how the knowledge might apply in rural areas, influence family caregivers’ work, and how this knowledge might influence the questions we asked in the survey. We then reread the transcripts to name and confirm the final themes (stage five). The report was generated (stage six) and discussed at a final team meeting. We followed Thorne’s suggestions for quality by checking the transcripts for accuracy, using memos and keeping an audit trail [31,49].
Survey data. We used SPSS® 26.0 statistical software (IBM®, Chicago, IL, USA) to analyze the data. First, we generated descriptive statistics for all variables. Bivariate analyses by self-rated caregiver levels of anxiety were performed using chi-squared tests comparing sociodemographic, clinical, and caregiving characteristics between two groups of caregivers: those with State Anxiety Scale scores of ≥41 (indicating moderate to severe anxiety) versus ≤40 (no to low anxiety). Then we used hierarchal stepwise linear regression to assess the unique associations between caregiver anxiety and the demographic and contextual factors identified by the chi-square tests as significant.

3. Results

3.1. Overview of the Qualitative Findings

In total, 14 interviews were conducted with family caregivers. Participants were all female, eight were daughters, three were wives, and four were mothers of the persons they cared for. Five were caring for congregate-care residents and nine for community-dwelling residents (See Table 1, Demographics).

3.2. Qualitative Results

There were two overarching themes (1) rural communities are a circle of support and (2) there are fewer formal supports. These rural caregivers acknowledged that they benefitted from the circle of support in rural communities, however, they all reported having to cope with fewer healthcare and social services in rural areas. This was exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic as indicated across three subthemes: (1) increases in care time and complexity; (2) social interaction decreased; and (3) costs increased.

3.2.1. Overarching Theme 1: Rural Communities Are a Circle of Support

Every participant referred to the support available in their rural communities through being “known in the community” and having friendly family, neighbors, and rural health and social care providers. One caregiver who also worked as a community volunteer pointed to the ad-hoc network of seniors who checked on each other,
So a lot of our seniors really stay connected with one another. We have our own, almost like a call-out system to check with and on each other. It is a circle of support that you need to out here. [Caregiver to mother who lives alone in family home]
Another caregiver to her mother in long-term care was less worried about her mother being lonely during COVID-19 lockdowns because, in their close-knit rural community, she and her mother knew the staff,
I feel like there are eyes and ears there. I have to confess, we’re in a bit of a unique situation here in our rural long-term care and hospital because everybody knows everybody, so I know the health care aides and LPNs and nurses that work up there. At least mom has those familiar faces. You know, whereas if we were in the city and you don’t have those connections, I don’t know how those families manage in a lockdown. [Daughter to mother in LTC]
The mother of an immunocompromised child noted the benefits of small schools in a rural area,
If I were in Edmonton, I would be a lot more hesitant about the risk, but we live in a small town. It’s a huge boon to have a K to 12 school. There are only 100 kids in the entire school and they take care of each other. With the distances, there hasn’t been much spread and we keep our bubble small. I think we were pretty proactive in that.
A wife caring for a husband recently discharged from hospital noted she was able to do so because of rural neighbors, “She will come in if I need help, just one of those rural neighbors who are honest and just good people. That’s kind of a hallmark of people in rural areas”. Yet one caregiver highlighted that this rural circle of support, which includes caring healthcare providers, didn’t make up for the lack of services, “Right, it’s not a lack of caring in rural areas. Our physicians, our care teams here, care about us. They care about [husband’s name], but that doesn’t help people like us in rural areas to get services”.

3.2.2. Overarching Theme 2: Coping with Fewer Services

According to these caregivers, COVID-19 exacerbated the existing difficulty accessing services. They reported that during the pandemic, many health providers left rural areas and the morale of those working was low,
I feel that the morale and understaffing are really affecting all medical personnel which was not great before COVID-19 and now is dire. They all need a grand holiday somewhere for a couple of weeks. Not practical, I know, but way more recognition than lip service and a few extra dollars that the current government is giving them. More job security and new hires. [Caregiver to husband]
A caregiver whose husband was recently discharged after a stroke spoke about the difficulty getting home care,
We have never had the same services in rural areas; for instance, home care can send someone out to help you with medication in the city. They don’t give us that if you’re outside of the town. So, there are less services. [Caregiver to husband]
A caregiver whose mother was in a lodge spoke to the lack of mental health and rehabilitation services as well as the fewer levels of congregate care. She noted that the people in her mother’s rural lodge had higher care needs than residents in urban lodges because of the limited congregate care.
So, from my perspective, the farther out from, you get from, the city or even some of the towns within [Name of County], it becomes difficult because we don’t have any therapists or mental health supports for these people in our communities. The rural lodges tend to have more people that need care and are less independent because we don’t have multilevel opportunities for people that can work. The lodge, that’s all we have here and if that doesn’t work, you are going to be driving a long way for a higher level of care. [Caregiver to mother]
Caregivers said they and the Albertans they cared for needed mental health services, but they were scarce or unavailable in their rural areas,
You have cancelled Canadian Mental Health supports in rural, remote Alberta. [Caregiver to husband]
Mental supports are desperately needed now for seniors. [Daughter caring for mother]
The mother of a child with disabilities linked mental health supports to the quality of care she could provide for her child, “There should be mental health supports in rural areas, to make sure that parents are supported and healthy. Good mental health makes a big difference to what you can do for your child”. Then she went on to talk about the difficulty accessing supports, “Well, there is supposed to be all of this stuff, but I don’t even know how you go about getting it”.
These rural caregivers reported a lack of accessible supports and difficulty accessing supports in rural areas was exacerbated by increases in care time and complexity, reduced social interactions, and increased costs.

3.2.3. Theme 1: Increases in Care Time and Complexity

Rural caregivers who were caring for a receiver living with them were caring for a receiver living in a separate home or were designated essential family caregivers in supportive living, or long-term care noted that COVID-19 increased the complexity of the care tasks and the time they were spending providing care. Caregivers reported that earlier discharges from hospital, delayed admissions to long-term care, and difficulty accessing home care support resulted in “more care on my shoulders” without a break. Those caring for a person living with them noted that the time together without a break or interaction with others was taxing,
But the one thing I have noticed throughout this whole thing is it’s just more taxing. It’s just the constant being around each other, being home all the time. There’s no break except for respite and that kind of stuff. [Mother of child with disabilities]
Care intensity also increased for the caregivers of congregate care residents who were one of two possible designated family caregivers,
It became much more intense because I was her designated caregiver and designated visitor or whatever they want to call it now. So that meant I couldn’t spread the care around at all. Everything becomes yours. So, whether it’s just visiting socially or taking her to appointments or picking up her grocery list, everything becomes your responsibility at some level. I probably doubled my hours. So, if I was going four hours a week, now I’m doing eight. It kind of depends on where she was at and her health. There was a point in time during that when she was hospitalized. I was there every day trying to visit through a window. That was very challenging. [Daughter to mother in congregate care lodge]
Notably, while all the rural caregivers interviewed reported that time and complexity increased, those who reported that their care work had increased from ten to fifteen hours a week talked about the positive aspects of caring, such as time together, “this time getting to know mom has been a privilege”, and reciprocity,
I think and personally, I feel like. I’m doing what a good daughter is supposed to do, because I do have friends whose parents are in care in a different community and they talk to them once or twice a year on the phone. I just feel, yes closer, but yeah, that I’m doing good. [Daughter to mother in her own home]

3.2.4. Theme 2: Social Interactions Decreased

All participants elucidated on the decrease in social interactions in the COVID-19 pandemic and how the lack of social interactions and social support from others reinforced the importance of face-to-face interactions. Initially, all rural caregivers focused on the need for personally meaningful activities for the person they cared for. Seeing friends and neighbors or going to events and grocery shopping was mentioned as important to community-dwelling care receivers’ quality of life. As the quote below illustrates, several participants also commented on the impacts of the loss of social interactions with the home care staff.
The biggest thing is that I can no longer take them anywhere. It’s very difficult. I no longer have help to get my dad from the wheelchair into the car and out. My husband used to help, and my two siblings used to come at least once a month. They haven’t been there in over four months. Home care has pulled back a lot of things. He gets a bath once a week. They used to have a bit of housekeeping twice a month, and that’s been taken away. It was seeing someone other than me. The isolation is really difficult because my dad is going further down the dementia path because he has no external connection apart from me and it’s hard to like he’s gone down a lot. [Caregiver to mother and father]
Those caring for congregate living residents also spoke about the importance of emotional support from family for resident’s well-being. As this quote illustrates, many caregivers thought the risk of the resident’s health deteriorating was greater than the risk of COVID-19 in these rural areas in which they had fairly few COVID-19 cases,
And my thing is, we cannot delay life for these old folks whose grains of sand in their hourglass are falling through at a really fast rate. They’ve got limited time. And the truth be known we’re avoiding COVID into the facility because it could kill them. You know what? It could. On the other hand, many things could kill them; mostly, they are dying from not seeing their family. [Daughter to father in LTC]
Only after they spoke about the care-receiver’s well-being did these rural caregivers mention the impacts that care work and the COVID-19 public health protocols had on their social isolation and health. They noted that fewer resources put the onus on them to provide care and social support. One wife spoke to the isolation of working less after her husband’s early hospital discharge,
So, I really don’t know what’s going on with the resources here. And so I’m home more, but I feel really isolated because there’s not a whole lot of resources. There’s nothing for mental health, I don’t have anybody to talk to, you know, who’s going through a similar experience, but my husband wants to stay home. When he was in hospital, he was just referred to family services for help at home. They won’t come out to our rural area. So maybe in Edmonton or bigger places, you have more resources but here, it has to be the care facility or me. [Wife caring for husband]
Another caregiver talked about sacrificing her health to care for family in long-term care and for a child with disabilities at home while continuing with farm work,
Need help for myself. I’ve gained weight and become more ill caring for others. But I live in a rural area with not a lot of options. For much of my life, I feel invisible. I know there are some ways I could get more help but that feels like an extra job for which I just don’t have time or energy.
Again, many rural caregivers submitted that public health social distancing protocols were the primary challenge that reduced social support,
Restrictions caused the greatest challenge....no help from others, no supports, no access to church, no access to events and activities, and no one else could help because they weren’t allowed or were too afraid to help. [Caregiver to mother in LTC]
Caregivers did appreciate the ease of medical appointments by phone or by Internet, which they considered a boon for their physical and mental health,
We were delighted that we could meet with doctors and specialists by phone and by video. Doctor’s appointments are always a big deal in coordination and in his and my emotional/physical wellness. They often trigger seizures. I am exhausted. Typically, a specialist visit is an eight-hour commitment for us (preparation, travel time, waiting) for a 15 min meeting. An appointment with our family Doctor is a two-hour commitment. Telephone and video appointments for prescription updates and regular doctor and specialist appointments has been an extraordinarily positive outcome of COVID. [Caregiver to husband]
They also valued the social connections the Internet offered them.
I do Zoom calls because it’s my outlet. Yes, it’s somewhere to find resources but mainly it’s just a connection to a social network, to know that you’re not alone. You can just sit there and have a coffee or a whiskey and coke and do your thing, you know what I mean? Like just have some relaxation time. [Caregiver to daughter with disabilities]
However, they noted that access to the Internet was expensive and unreliable in their rural areas,
Yeah, I’m on the Internet that goes and comes and goes, so it may disconnect for seconds. That’s the least of it, it doesn’t always keep me connected, gone in the blink of an eye. [Caregiver to husband with stroke]

3.2.5. Theme 3: Increased Costs

Lost wages and increased out-of-pocket costs were a significant concern for approximately one-third of the interviewees. Two caregivers noted incomes were reduced because they or their partner was working less during the COVID-19 pandemic. Four caregivers reported their out-of-pocket expenses increased; they mentioned increased costs in everything from the cost of insurance, taxes, electricity, heating, food, to specific caregiving needs like disability aids and incontinence products. Rural distances and lack of rural services increased their transportation costs,
I have to take time off from work in order to transport my dad out of town to medical appointments in the city. Sometimes these appointments are over consecutive days requiring the added expenses of hotel rooms, meals, parking and fuel. [Family caregiver to Father]
While many participants talked about the difficulty getting home care in rural areas, one related it to transportation costs as well as home care boundaries,
I have been dealing with home care out of [Town 1] in the last week. They have been excellent by the way. [Town 1] is 50 km away from me making it a 100 km round trip to come out and help my husband to shower. That roughly an hour and a half to a 2-h drive round trip depending on the weather and roads. [Town 2] is 25 km away and a half-hour drive, so half the distance and time to come here but I live on the wrong side of [name of road] so home care from [Town 1] gets to come. Can the areas not work together to help each other out saving valuable time and money? [Family caregiver to husband]
She then went on to talk about how distance made the time she had for respite inadequate,
I get three hours respite. Travel time is an hour, a half-hour each way, I rush doing the shopping. If I do any other errands, you rush or you can’t do it.

3.3. Survey Results

3.3.1. Demographics and Descriptive Statistics

In total, our recruitment strategy led to 685 link click-throughs from 21 June to 31 August 2021. Only surveys with 80% of the survey questions completed (n = 556) were included (completion rate 81.2%). Of the 556 Alberta caregivers participating in the survey, 126 were rural (126/556 = 22%). No cookies or IP addresses were checked to prevent multiple entries; however, we did check manually and excluded identical entries. The margin of error is not applicable in this study due to the online recruitment methodology
Rural caregivers came from four Alberta health zones (North n = 39; Central n = 52; South n = 13, Calgary n = 22). The majority were women (89%) and between 35 to 64 (65%) years of age. About a third (31%) were over 65 and 4% were 15 to 34 years. Most (69%) had college, university, or technical training, with 15% having high school or less and 14% post-graduate or professional training. Care-receivers ranged in age from 4 to 99 years of age (Mean 66, Median 79). Two-thirds (67%) were 65 years of age and over and two thirds (66%) were living in their community homes and 34% resided in congregate care (lodges, assisted/supportive living, long-term care). Two-thirds of care receivers had one or two chronic conditions, 28% had three to four chronic conditions, and 6% had more than 5 chronic conditions. See Table 2 for demographics.
Care work. Most caregivers cared for one person (71%), 18% for two, and 11% cared for 3 or more. Half (38%) were caring 10 h a week or less, 15% for 11 to 20 h a week, 20% for 21 to 40 h per week, and 27% for 41 h or more per week. Caregivers caring in community homes were cared for much longer than those caring for congregate-care residents. More than two-thirds (69%) of those caring in congregate care were caring for less than 10 h a week, while 62% of those caring for Albertans in community homes were caring 21 or more hours per week. As well, 60% of the caregivers caring in community homes reported caring for more hours since the COVID-19 pandemic began compared to 33% of those caring for congregate living residents. While the proportions of the caregivers caring in community homes (85%) and congregate care (74%) providing transportation were similar, a higher proportion of the caregivers caring in community homes were helping with extended activities of daily living (78%-preparing food, housekeeping, laundry), basic activities of daily living (56% eating, dressing, managing medications), and intimate care (43%-bathing, toileting, managing incontinence). See File S5: Types of support provided by caregivers in the community and in congregate care.
Caregiver health. Over half (55%) of the respondents reported their physical health deteriorated and 68% that their mental health worsened. On the self-rated Clinical Frailty Scale (range 1–9), the mean frailty rating was 2.56 (SD1.32). Almost a third (31%) of caregivers rated themselves as moderately frail (4–6) and one caregiver self-reported as very frail (7–9).
Social loneliness. The mean score was 2.12 (SD 1.23) (range 0–3). The proportion of caregivers who felt they were lacking social networks was high—72% did not have enough people they could rely on when they had problems, 71% perceived they did not have enough people they could trust completely, and 70% did not feel they had enough people they felt close to (Table 2).
Caregiver anxiety. Anxiety scores ranged from 20 to 80, with a mean of 46.58 (SD 14.52). As with social loneliness, the proportion of anxious caregivers was high. Almost two-thirds (65%) of caregivers were moderately to severely anxious (scores ≥ 41).
Financial hardships. Two-thirds (66%) indicated they were having financial hardship because of their caregiving responsibilities. While 22% had no increased expenses because of their caregiving, 42% were spending more on food, 27% on care supplies (incontinence products, meal replacements), 23% on medical expenses, 15% on mobility equipment, 20% on household expenses, 22% on personal items (clothing, shoes), 37% on personal protective equipment, and 27% on technology. See File S6: Expenses that increased due to caregiving responsibilities.

3.3.2. Regression Models

Table 3 shows the hierarchal stepwise linear regression results for the influence of weekly care time, caregiver frailty, financial difficulty, and social loneliness on anxiety while controlling for age and gender. Multicollinearity was not present (Tolerance values were more than 0.1 and variance inflation factors were less than 10). In Model 1, age and gender were entered together and explained 9.3% of the variance in anxiety. In Model 2, controlling for age and gender, weekly care time, caregiver frailty, and perceived financial difficulties improved the model fit, explaining an additional 33.5% of the variance (F (3, 101) = 19.72, p < 0.001). In the final model, four factors, frailty, social loneliness, financial hardship and age were statistically significant and explained 50.0% of the variance, with frailty recording a higher beta factor (beta = 0.322, p ≤ 0.001) followed by social loneliness (beta = 0.273 p ≤ 0.001), financial hardship (beta = 0.197, p = 0.016), and age (beta = −0.165, p = 0.032).

4. Discussion

This study explored the experiences of rural caregivers who provided care during the COVID-19 pandemic. Qualitatively caregivers reported that their rural Alberta communities were supportive; however, COVID-19 exacerbated the existing lack of healthcare and social services. Care time, care complexity, and care costs increased while social interaction decreased. Quantitatively, 18 months after the World Health Organization declared that COVID-19 was a pandemic, two-thirds of the rural caregivers completing the survey were anxious, over half (55%) indicated their physical health, and two-thirds (68%) indicated their mental health had deteriorated since the COVID-19 pandemic began. Two-thirds of these rural caregivers were experiencing financial strain because of their caregiving. A plethora of research has documented the lack of supports and services for rural caregivers prior to the COVID-19 pandemic [28,50,51,52,53,54,55]. For example, in their 2006 review of rural women caregivers in Canada, Crosato and Leipart [50] found that limited access to appropriate and adequate healthcare services, challenges of distance and transportation, and social/geographical challenges left rural caregivers susceptible to distress and burden. They suggested the nurses working in rural healthcare settings were well-positioned to support family caregivers. In his 2016 book, Families Caring for an Aging America, Dr. Richard Schulz agreed that family caregivers interact with many healthcare providers in their caregiving role yet are marginalized within healthcare systems [56]. Consistent support from healthcare providers, as well as other services such as respite, community supports, and financial supports, are needed.
In the follow-up quantitative study, weekly care work increased for a greater proportion of those caring in the community, physical health deteriorated by half and mental health by two-thirds, and almost a third of caregivers were experiencing financial hardships as a result of caregiving. Contrary to the qualitative reports that people in rural communities are supportive, in the 2021 survey, over two-thirds of the rural caregivers completing the survey were socially lonely. The three questions asked if they had enough people they could rely on when they had problems, trusted completely, or if they felt close to their networks. Family caregivers’ social networks do get smaller, especially as care time increases. In the interviews, rural family caregivers were very cognizant of the public health advice to reduce social interactions to keep care receivers safe, who are vulnerable to COVID-19 infections.
We used linear regression to understand the factors related to the caregivers’ anxiety. Frailty, social loneliness, financial hardship, and younger age were associated with caregiver anxiety. In this survey, we used a self-report version of the Clinical Frailty Scale [36], specifically developed to explore whether person-centered care can improve outcomes once frailty and social vulnerability are identified. About a third (31%) of these caregivers reported they had moderate frailty, indicating that they could benefit from support to improve their health [37,38,57]. The primary reason for the care-receivers’ admission to congregate care is the family caregiver has died, or their health is failing [1,58]. Healthcare providers could use this self-report tool clinically to assess the family caregiver’s own view of their frailty and signpost caregivers to supports to maintain their own wellbeing.
In this study, some rural caregivers recognized that healthcare providers in their rural areas could provide them with more support. Typically, rural healthcare providers are knowledgeable about the services and supports existing in the community and can use their knowledge of the caregiver and their care situation to signpost caregivers to person-centered supports. However, previous research indicates gap between what family caregivers need and preparation of healthcare providers to support family caregivers [2,59,60]. Even though family caregivers interact with many health providers [2,60], and caregiving advocates advise that healthcare providers are well-positioned to support family caregivers [2,56,61], current Canada health providers’ mandate is to care for their patients [59,62,63]. Health providers’ responsibility to the caregiver is not clearly delineated nor funded [59,62,63]. We agree with American caregiving scholar Richard Schultz [2] and British Columbia Doctors [61] that the family caregivers’ role needs to be recognized in policies and health providers’ role in supporting family caregivers mandated and funded. We are using this research to inform advocacy for person-centered supports for family caregivers, including mandates and funding for consistent person-centered care in the healthcare system.
Financial burden related to caregiving was also significantly related to increased anxiety in linear regression. The relationship between anxiety and the financial burden of caregiving is consistent with prior work with caregivers [64,65,66]. In the qualitative interviews, many caregivers referred to increased out-of-pocket costs related to their caregiving during the COVID-19 pandemic that added to higher costs for transportation because of distances in rural areas. Two-thirds of these rural caregivers reported they were financially stretched due to caregiving. The rigors of caregiving can force caregivers to reduce employment, thus income, and increase out-of-pocket costs [67,68]. Using the 2012 General Social Survey, Duncan found many family caregivers were spending $500 per month, with some averaging $7000 [67]. Although there are some Canadian federal financial supports for family caregivers, very few family caregivers (6%) are able to take advantage of them [67,68].

Limitations

The qualitative and quantitative data in this study are cross-sectional. Although the rural caregivers in the study came from across the province, the sample size is small. The generalizability of the findings is limited by the cross-sectional study, the small sample size, and the primarily female participants. However, rural caregivers are an understudied population. This study does demonstrate rural caregivers would benefit from support tailored for their rural area and their personal caregiving situation.

5. Conclusions

Rural family caregivers are vulnerable to anxiety, financial distress, and social loneliness due to the nature of caregiving and the lack of supports, particularly evident in rural areas. Primary healthcare and home care teams are well-positioned to assess caregivers’ health and care situation as well as to connect caregivers to supports available in their areas and advocate for caregiver policies.

Supplementary Materials

The following supporting information can be downloaded at: https://www.mdpi.com/article/10.3390/healthcare10071155/s1: File S1: Semi-structured interview guide; File S2: Survey; File S3: Clinical Frailty Scale Self-Report Version; File S4: Stages of Thematic Analysis; File S5: Types of support provided by caregivers in the community and in congregate care; File S6: Expenses that increased due to caregiving responsibilities; File S7: CHERRIES checklist: The Checklist for Reporting Results of Internet E-Surveys.

Author Contributions

Conceptualization, S.A. and J.P.; methodology, S.A., T.L., J.P., L.C., B.D. and P.G.J.T.; software, S.A., J.P., B.D. and P.G.J.T.; validation, S.A., J.P., T.L., L.C., B.D. and P.G.J.T.; formal analysis, S.A., J.P., B.D. and P.G.J.T.; investigation, S.A., J.P., T.L., L.C., B.D., L.-A.S. and P.G.J.T.; resources, S.A., J.P., B.D. and P.G.J.T.; data curation, S.A., J.P., T.L. and L.-A.S.; writing—original draft preparation, S.A.; writing—review and editing, S.A., J.P., T.L., L.-A.S., B.D. and P.G.J.T.; visualization, S.A., J.P., B.D. and P.G.J.T.; supervision, J.P.; project administration, S.A.; funding acquisition, J.P., B.D. and P.G.J.T. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

Funding

This research was funded by the Northern Alberta Academic Family Medicine Fund.

Institutional Review Board Statement

The study was conducted according to the guidelines of the Declaration of Helsinki and approved by the Health Ethics Research Board of the University of Alberta (PRO-00097996 9 June 2020 to 28 April 2023).

Informed Consent Statement

Participants provided informed verbal consent for interviews conducted via Zoom and implied consent by continuing to the survey after reading the information about the study.

Data Availability Statement

Data belong to the survey Impact of COVID-19 on Family Caregivers in Alberta and the data are owned by Jasneet Parmar the principal investigator. People interested in obtaining the data set can contact Sharon Anderson, research coordinator of the study. Email [email protected].

Acknowledgments

We thank the interview and survey participants for their time.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest. The funder had no role in the design of the study; in the collection, analyses, or interpretation of data, in the writing of the manuscript, or in the decision to publish the results.

References

  1. Schulz, R.; Beach, S.R.; Czaja, S.J.; Martire, L.M.; Monin, J.K. Family caregiving for older adults. Annu. Rev. Psychol. 2020, 71, 635–659. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  2. Schulz, R.; Beach, S.R.; Friedman, E.M.; Martsolf, G.R.; Rodakowski, J.; Everette James, A. Changing structures and processes to support family caregivers of seriously ill patients. J. Palliat. Med. 2018, 21, S36–S42. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed] [Green Version]
  3. Pilapil, M.; Coletti, D.J.; Rabey, C.; DeLaet, D. Caring for the caregiver: Supporting families of youth with special health care needs. Curr. Probl. Pediatr. Adolesc. Health Care 2017, 47, 190–199. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  4. Qualls, S.H. Caregiving families within the long-term services and support system for older adults. Am. Psychol. 2016, 71, 283–293. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed] [Green Version]
  5. Statistics Canada. Illustrated Glossary: Rural Area (RA). Available online: https://www150.statcan.gc.ca/n1/pub/92-195-x/2021001/geo/ra-rr/ra-rr-eng.htm (accessed on 10 March 2022).
  6. Keating, N. Rural Ageing: A Good Place to Grow Old? Policy Press: Bristol, UK, 2008; pp. 1–156. [Google Scholar]
  7. Keating, N.; Eales, J.; Phillips, J.E. Age-friendly rural communities: Conceptualizing ‘best-fit’. Can. J. Aging Rev. Can. Vieil. 2013, 32, 319–332. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  8. Goh, J.M.; Gao, G.G.; Agarwal, R. The creation of social value: Can an online health community reduce rural-urban health disparities? MIS Q. Manag. Inf. Syst. 2016, 40, 247–263. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  9. Crowther, M.R.; Scogin, F.; Johnson Norton, M. Treating the aged in rural communities: The application of cognitive-behavioral therapy for depression. J. Clin. Psychol. 2010, 66, 502–512. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  10. Poulin, L.I.L.; Skinner, M.W.; Hanlon, N. Rural gerontological health: Emergent questions for research, policy and practice. Soc. Sci. Med. 2020, 258, 113065. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  11. Dal Bello-Haas, V.P.; Cammer, A.; Morgan, D.; Stewart, N.; Kosteniuk, J. Rural and remote dementia care challenges and needs: Perspectives of formal and informal care providers residing in Saskatchewan, Canada. Rural Remote Health 2014, 14, 2747. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  12. Bédard, M.; Koivuranta, A.; Stuckey, A. Health impact on caregivers of providing informal care to a cognitively impaired older adult: Rural versus urban settings. Can. J. Rural Med. 2004, 9, 15–23. [Google Scholar]
  13. Dahan-Oliel, N.; Mazer, B.; Gélinas, I.; Dobbs, B.; Lefebvre, H. Transportation use in community-dwelling older adults: Association with participation and leisure activities. Can. J. Aging 2010, 29, 491–502. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  14. Dobbs, B.M.; Harper, L.A.; Wood, A. Transitioning from driving to driving cessation: The role of specialized driving cessation support groups for individuals with dementia. Top. Geriatr. Rehabil. 2009, 25, 73–86. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  15. Kovaleva, M.; Spangler, S.; Clevenger, C.; Hepburn, K. Chronic stress, social isolation, and perceived loneliness in dementia caregivers. J. Psychosoc. Nurs. Ment. Health Serv. 2018, 56, 36–43. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  16. Wagner, M.; Brandt, M. Loneliness among informal caregivers aged 50 + in Europe. In Ageing in Europe-Supporting Policies for an Inclusive Society; Börsch-Supan, A., Kneip, T., Litwin, H., Myck, M., Weber, G., Eds.; De Gruyter: Berlin, Germany, 2015; pp. 179–188. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  17. Zhang, B.; Conner, K.O.; Meng, H.; Tu, N.; Liu, D.; Chen, Y. Social support and quality of life among rural family caregivers of persons with severe mental illness in Sichuan Province, China: Mediating roles of care burden and loneliness. Qual. Life Res. 2021, 30, 1881–1890. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  18. Bayly, M.; Morgan, D.; Froehlich Chow, A.; Kosteniuk, J.; Elliot, V. Dementia-related education and support service availability, accessibility, and use in rural areas: Barriers and solutions. Can. J. Aging 2020, 39, 545–585. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed] [Green Version]
  19. Morgan, D.; Kosteniuk, J.; O’Connell, M.E.; Kirk, A.; Stewart, N.J.; Seitz, D.; Bayly, M.; Froehlich Chow, A.; Elliot, V.; Daku, J.; et al. Barriers and facilitators to development and implementation of a rural primary health care intervention for dementia: A process evaluation. BMC Health Serv. Res. 2019, 19, 709. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  20. Innes, A.; Page, S.J.; Cutler, C. Barriers to leisure participation for people with dementia and their carers: An exploratory analysis of carer and people with dementia’s experiences. Dement.-Int. J. Soc. Res. Pract. 2016, 15, 1643–1665. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed] [Green Version]
  21. Beach, S.R.; Schulz, R.; Donovan, H.; Rosland, A.-M. Family caregiving during the COVID-19 pandemic. Gerontologist 2021, 61, 650–660. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  22. Carers UK. Caring behind Closed Doors: Forgotten Families in the Coronavirus Outbreak; Carers UK: London, UK, 2020; p. 30. [Google Scholar]
  23. Alves, L.M.; Wilson, S.R. The effects of loneliness on telemarketing fraud vulnerability among older adults. J. Elder Abus. Negl. 2008, 20, 63–85. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  24. Ontario Caregiver Association. Spotlight Report: The Impact of COVID-19 on Caregivers: Year Two; Ontario Caregiver Association: Toronto, ON, Canada, 2021; p. 21. [Google Scholar]
  25. Giebel, C.; Cannon, J.; Hanna, K.; Butchard, S.; Eley, R.; Gaughan, A.; Komuravelli, A.; Shenton, J.; Callaghan, S.; Tetlow, H.; et al. Impact of COVID-19 related social support service closures on people with dementia and unpaid carers: A qualitative study. Aging Ment. Health 2020, 25, 1281–1288. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  26. Stewart, M.; Barnfather, A.; Neufeld, A.; Warren, S.; Letourneau, N.; Liu, L. Accessible support for family caregivers of seniors with chronic conditions: From isolation to inclusion. Can. J. Aging 2006, 25, 179–192. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  27. Kahriman, F.; Zaybak, A. Caregiver burden and perceived social support among caregivers of patients with cancer. Asian Pac. J. Cancer Prev. 2015, 16, 3313–3317. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed] [Green Version]
  28. Carroll, L.; Chippior, J.; Karmali, S.; Sriram, D.; Ysseldyk, R. We are caregivers: Social identity is associated with lower perceived stress among rural informal caregivers. Can. J. Aging 2019, 38, 59–75. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  29. Anderson, S.; Parmar, J. A Tale of Two Solitudes Experienced by Alberta Family Caregivers during the COVID-19 Pandemic; Department of Family Medicine, University of Alberta: Edmonton, AB, Canada, 2020; p. 29. [Google Scholar]
  30. Anderson, S.; Parmar, J.; Dobbs, B.; Tian, P.G.J. A tale of two solitudes: Loneliness and anxiety of family caregivers caring in community homes and congregate care. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2021, 18, 10010. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  31. Thorne, S. Toward methodological emancipation in applied health Research. Qual. Health Res. 2011, 21, 443–453. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  32. Thorne, S. Interpretive Description; Left Coast Press: Walnut Creek, CA, USA, 2008. [Google Scholar]
  33. Thompson Burdine, J.; Thorne, S.; Sandhu, G. Interpretive description: A flexible qualitative methodology for medical education research. Med. Educ. 2020, 55, 336–343. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  34. Government of Alberta. Alberta Populations 2021 Statistics Canada. Table 17-10-0009-01 Population Estimates, Quarterly. Available online: https://worldpopulationreview.com/canadian-provinces/alberta-population (accessed on 22 March 2022).
  35. Pauley, T.; Chang, B.W.; Wojtak, A.; Seddon, G.; Hirdes, J. Predictors of caregiver distress in the community setting using the home care version of the resident assessment instrument. Prof. Case Manag. 2018, 23, 60–69. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  36. Rasiah, J.; O’Rourke, T.; Dompé, B.; Rolfson, D.; Mansell, B.; Pereira, R.; Chan, T.; McDonald, K.; Summach, A. Customizing a program for older adults living with frailty in primary care. J. Prim. Care Community Health 2021, 12, 21501327211034807. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  37. Rockwood, K. Rationing care in COVID-19: If we must do it, can we do better? Age Ageing 2021, 50, 3–6. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  38. Rockwood, K.; Song, X.; MacKnight, C.; Bergman, H.; Hogan, D.B.; McDowell, I.; Mitnitski, A. A global clinical measure of fitness and frailty in elderly people. Cmaj 2005, 173, 489–495. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  39. Flaatten, H.; Guidet, B.; Andersen, F.H.; Artigas, A.; Cecconi, M.; Boumendil, A.; Elhadi, M.; Fjølner, J.; Joannidis, M.; Jung, C.; et al. Reliability of the clinical frailty scale in very elderly ICU patients: A prospective European study. Ann. Intensive Care 2021, 11, 22. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  40. Tluczek, A.; Henriques, J.B.; Brown, R.L. Support for the reliability and validity of a six-item state anxiety scale derived from the State-Trait Anxiety Inventory. J. Nurs. Meas. 2009, 17, 19–28. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed] [Green Version]
  41. Marteau, T.M.; Bekker, H. The development of a six-item short-form of the state scale of the Spielberger State-Trait Anxiety Inventory (STAI). Br. J. Clin. Psychol. 1992, 31 Pt 3, 301–306. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  42. Chlan, L.; Savik, K.; Weinert, C. Development of a shortened State anxiety scale from the Spielberger State-Trait Anxiety Inventory (STAI) for patients receiving mechanical ventilatory support. J. Nurs. Meas. 2003, 11, 283–293. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  43. De Jong Gierveld, J.; Keating, N.; Fast, J.E. Determinants of loneliness among older adults in Canada. Can. J. Aging 2015, 34, 125–136. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  44. De Jong Gierveld, J.; Van Tilburg, T. A 6-item scale for overall, emotional, and social loneliness—Confirmatory tests on survey data. Res. Aging 2006, 28, 582–598. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  45. Braun, V.; Clarke, V. Using thematic analysis in psychology. Qual. Res. Psychol. 2006, 3, 77–101. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  46. Ambagtsheer, R.C.; Beilby, J.J.; Visvanathan, R.; Dent, E.; Yu, S.; Braunack-Mayer, A.J. Should we screen for frailty in primary care settings? A fresh perspective on the frailty evidence base: A narrative review. Prev. Med. 2019, 119, 63–69. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  47. Braun, V.; Clarke, V. Conceptual and design thinking for thematic analysis. Qual. Psychol. 2021, 9, 3–26. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  48. Braun, V.; Clarke, V. Can I use TA? Should I use TA? Should I not use TA? Comparing reflexive thematic analysis and other pattern-based qualitative analytic approaches. Couns. Psychother. Res. 2021, 21, 37–47. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  49. Thorne, S. The science and art of theoretical location. Evid. Based Nurs. 2014, 17, 31. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  50. Crosato, K.E.; Leipert, B. Rural women caregivers in Canada. Rural Remote Health 2006, 6, 520. [Google Scholar] [PubMed]
  51. Forbes, D.A.; Morgan, D.; Janzen, B.L. Rural and urban Canadians with dementia: Use of health care services. Can. J. Aging 2006, 25, 321–330. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  52. Keating, N.; Swindle, J.; Fletcher, S. Aging in rural Canada: A retrospective and review. Can. J. Aging Rev. Can. Vieil. 2011, 30, 323–338. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  53. Kuluski, K.; Williams, A.P.; Berta, W.; Laporte, A. Home care or long-term care? Setting the balance of care in urban and rural Northwestern Ontario, Canada. Health Soc. Care Community 2012, 20, 438–448. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  54. Peeters, J.M.; Van Beek, A.P.A.; Meerveld, J.H.C.M.; Spreeuwenberg, P.M.M.; Francke, A.L. Informal caregivers of persons with dementia, their use of and needs for specific professional support: A survey of the National Dementia Programme. BMC Nursing 2010, 9, 9. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  55. Holland, M.R. More than chores: The invisible health work of family caregivers in rural New Brunswick, Canada. Health Place 2022, 73, 102726. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  56. Schulz, R.; Eden, J. Families Caring for an Aging America; National Academies Press: Washington, DC, USA, 2016; p. 377. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  57. Muscedere, J.; Andrew, M.K.; Bagshaw, S.M.; Estabrooks, C.; Hogan, D.; Holroyd-Leduc, J.; Howlett, S.; Lahey, W.; Maxwell, C.; McNally, M.; et al. Screening for frailty in Canada’s health care system: A time for action. Can. J. Aging 2016, 35, 281–297. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  58. Bosco, N. Caring for carers. Implications and repercussions of reduced attention to family caregivers on individual health and collective wellbeing. Sociol. Del Lav. 2018, 120–135. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  59. Parmar, J.; Anderson, S.; Abassi, M.; Ahmadinejad, S.; Bremault-Phillips, S.; Chan, K.; Charles, L.; Dobbs, B.; Khera, A.S.; Stickney-Lee, J.; et al. Support for family caregivers: A scoping review of family physician’s perspectives on their role in supporting family caregivers. Health Soc. Care Community 2020, 28, 716–733. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  60. Parmar, J.; Anderson, S.; Abbasi, M.; Ahmadinejad, S.; Chan, K.; Charles, L.; Dobbs, B.; Khera, A.S.; Stickney-Lee, J.; Tian, P.G.J.; et al. Family physician’s and primary care team’s perspectives on supporting family caregivers in primary care networks. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2021, 18, 3293. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  61. Doctors of British Columbia. Circle of Care: Supporting Family Caregivers in BC; Doctors of British Columbia: Vancouver, BC, Canada, 2016; p. 35. [Google Scholar]
  62. Bedard, M.; Gibbons, C.; Lambert-Belanger, A.; Riendeau, J. Development of a tool to investigate caregiving issues from the perspective of family physicians and discussion of preliminary results. Prim. Health Care Res. Dev. 2014, 15, 220–226. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed] [Green Version]
  63. Mitnick, S.; Leffler, C.; Hood, V.L. Family caregivers, patients and physicians: Ethical guidance to optimize relationships. J. Gen. Intern. Med. 2010, 25, 255–260. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed] [Green Version]
  64. Fast, J. Caregiving for Older Adults with Disabilities: Present Costs, Future Challenges; Institute for Research on Public Policy: Montreal, QC, Canada, 2015; p. 36. [Google Scholar]
  65. Kroll, J.L.; Kim, S.; Cho, D.; Weathers, S.P.; Chen, A.B.; Smith, G.; Bruera, E.; Milbury, K. Financial distress and its associated burden in couples coping with an advanced cancer. Support. Care Cancer 2022, 30, 4485–4495. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  66. Hebdon, M.C.T.; Xu, J.; Reblin, M.; Clayton, M.F.; Mooney, K.; Ellington, L. Balancing work and hospice caregiving—A closer look at burden, preparedness, and mental health. J. Pain Symptom Manag. 2022, 63, 283–292. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  67. Duncan, K.A.; Shooshtari, S.; Roger, K.; Fast, J.; Han, J. The cost of caring: Out-of-pocket expenditures and financial hardship among Canadian carers. Int. J. Care Caring 2020, 4, 141–166. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  68. Turcotte, M. Family Caregiving: What Are the Consequences? Statistics: Ottawa, ON, Canada, 2013; p. 16. ISSN 2291-0840. [Google Scholar]
Table 1. Demographics qualitative interviews.
Table 1. Demographics qualitative interviews.
CaregiverPerson Cared for
1.
Daughter
Mother lives in a lodge
2.
Daughter
Mother lives independently alone in family home
3.
Daughter
Mother resides in long-term care
4.
Daughter
Mother lives independently alone in a condo
5.
Daughter
Mother resides in long-term care
6.
Wife
Husband in their community home
7.
Daughter
Mother resides in long-term care
8.
Daughter
Father resides in long-term care
9.
Mother
Child immunocompromised resides in their community home
10.
Wife
Husband resides in their community home
11.
Mother
Child with disabilities resides in their community home
12.
Wife & Mother
Husband and two children with disabilities residing in their community home
13.
Mother
Adult daughter, disabled since birth living in the community
14.
Daughter
Mother and father living in their own home
Table 2. Survey demographics by high and low anxiety.
Table 2. Survey demographics by high and low anxiety.
Caregiver Factors
Caregiver Factors TotalAnxiety Low < 40Anxiety Moderate–High 41+Chi-Square p
SexTotal 11439 (34%)75 (66%)0.30
Female 103 (90%)34 (33%)69 (67%)
Male11 (10%)5 (46%)6 (54%)
Age 11439 (34%)75 (66%)0.39
15–64 y79 (69%)25 (64%)54 (72%)
≥65 y35 (31%)14 (40%)21 (28%)
Education Total 11439 (34%)75 (66%)0.58
High school or less17 (15%)6 (35%)11 (65%)
College University, Technical 79 (63%)25 (32%)54 (68%)
Post-graduate18 (16%)8 (44%)10 (56%)
Weekly Care time 11239 (35%)73 (65%)
Less than 10 h wk46 (41%)22 (56%)24 (33%)
11 to 20 h wk14 (12%)3 (8%)11 (15%)
21–40 h wk20 (18%)7 (18%)13 (18%)
41–120 h wk21 (19%)5 (13%)16 (23%)
121–168 h wk11 (10%)2 (5%)9 (12%)
Weekly Care time dichotomized 11239 (35%)73 (65%)0.10
≤20 h60 (54%)25 (42%)35 (58%)
≥21 h52 (46%)14 (27%)38 (73%)
Changes in care since COVID-19 (only those who were caring before March 2020. 11038 (35%)72 (65%)0.03
More care 54 (49%)12 (31%)42 (58%)
Same care 35 (32%)17 (45%)18 (25%)
Less care21 (19%)9 (24%)12 (17%)
Length of caregiving 119
Mean (SD)8.2 (7.57)
Median 5.0
Mode3.0
Social Loneliness
There are few people I can rely on when I have problems 11238 (34%)74 (66%)<0.001
people to rely on 31 (28%)20 (53%)11 (15%)
Few people rely on 81 (72%)18 (47%)63 (85%)
There are few people I can trust completely 11439 (34%)75 (66%)<0.001
Enough people I trust 33 (29%)21 (54%)12 (16%)
Few people I trust 81 (71%)18 (46%)63 (84%)
There are not enough people I feel close to 11439 (34%)75 (66%)<0.001
Enough people I feel close to 39 (34%)25 (64%)14 (19%)
Not enough people I am close to75 (66%)14 (36%)61 (81%)
Physical Health Deteriorated 11339 (35%)74 (65%)0.01
Deteriorated 62 (55%)15 (39%)47 (64%)
Same Improved51 (45%)24 (51%)27 (36%)
Mental Health Deteriorated 11439 (34%)75 (66%)<0.001
Deteriorated 77 (68%)13 (33%)64 (85%)
Same Improved37 (32%)26 (67%)11 (15%)
Frailty Caregivers 11138 (34%)73 (66%)<0.001
Not Frail 1–376 (68%)36 (95%)40 (55%)
Frail 4–735 (32%)2 (5%)32 (44%)
Very Frail1 (1%) 1 (1%)
Financial difficulties 11439 (34%)75 (66%)0.01
No difficulty39 (34%)26 (67%)31 (41%)
Difficulty75 (66%)13 (33%)44 (59%)
Ability to navigate the systems 11338 (34%)75 (66%)0.23
Not confident22 (19%)5 (23%)17 (77%)
Confident91 (81%)33 (36%)58 (64%)
Confident98 (88%)37 (38%)61 (62%)
Care-Receiver Factors
Care-Receiver Factors TotalAnxiety Low < 40Anxiety Moderate–High 41+Chi-Square p
Residence 11239 (35%)73 (65%)0.08
Community75 (67%)22 (29%)53 (71%)
Congregate Care37 (33%)17 (46%)20 (54%)
Age 10837 (34%)71 (66%)0.06
≤24 y14 (13%)1 (7%)13 (93%)
25–64 y21 (19%)6 (29%)15 (71%)
65–84 y42 (39%)15 (38%)27 (64%)
≥85 y31 (29%)15 (48%)16 (52%)
Number of health conditions 10737 (35%)70 (65%)0.14
1–2 70 (65%)26 (37%)44 (63%)
3–4 30 (37%)11 (37%)19 (63%)
≥57 (7%)0 (00%)7 (100%)
Frailty 10938 (35%)71 (65%)0.89
Active 1–316 (15%)6 (38%)10 (62%)
Frail 4–638 (35%)14 (37%)24 (63%)
Severely Frail 7–955 (18%)18 (33%)37 (67%)
Table 3. Hierarchical linear regression model for anxiety a (n = 111).
Table 3. Hierarchical linear regression model for anxiety a (n = 111).
Beta95.0% CI p-Value
Model 1 0.006
Gender−0.129−15.19, 2.97
Age−0.244−4.98, −0.59 0.013
Model 2 <0.001
Gender−0.010−8.00, 7.050.900
Age−0.148−3.49, 0.130.038
Care Time0.150−0.172, 3.170.078
Frailty 0.4042.86, 6.95 <0.001
Financial hardship 0.2270.867, 5.680.009
Model 3 0.001
Gender−0.010−7.64, 6.650.891
Age−0.165−3.61, −0.160.032
Care Time0.102−0.581, 2.610.210
Frailty 3.8531.89, 5.92 <0.001
Financial hardship0.1970.545, 5.230.016
Navigation confidence−0.076−3.27, 1.050.311
Social loneliness0.2731.37, 4.90<0.001
Bolded values indicate significance at the p < 0.05 level. a Dependent Variable: State Anxiety Scale: 20 to 80; Adjusted R2 Model 1 = 0.076; Model 2 = 0.400; Model 3 = 0.465, ΔR2 Model 1 R2 = 0.093 (p = 0.006); Model 2 R2 = 0.428 (p < 0.001); Model 3 R2 = 0.500 (p = 0.001).
Publisher’s Note: MDPI stays neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.

Share and Cite

MDPI and ACS Style

L’Heureux, T.; Parmar, J.; Dobbs, B.; Charles, L.; Tian, P.G.J.; Sacrey, L.-A.; Anderson, S. Rural Family Caregiving: A Closer Look at the Impacts of Health, Care Work, Financial Distress, and Social Loneliness on Anxiety. Healthcare 2022, 10, 1155. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare10071155

AMA Style

L’Heureux T, Parmar J, Dobbs B, Charles L, Tian PGJ, Sacrey L-A, Anderson S. Rural Family Caregiving: A Closer Look at the Impacts of Health, Care Work, Financial Distress, and Social Loneliness on Anxiety. Healthcare. 2022; 10(7):1155. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare10071155

Chicago/Turabian Style

L’Heureux, Tanya, Jasneet Parmar, Bonnie Dobbs, Lesley Charles, Peter George J. Tian, Lori-Ann Sacrey, and Sharon Anderson. 2022. "Rural Family Caregiving: A Closer Look at the Impacts of Health, Care Work, Financial Distress, and Social Loneliness on Anxiety" Healthcare 10, no. 7: 1155. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare10071155

APA Style

L’Heureux, T., Parmar, J., Dobbs, B., Charles, L., Tian, P. G. J., Sacrey, L. -A., & Anderson, S. (2022). Rural Family Caregiving: A Closer Look at the Impacts of Health, Care Work, Financial Distress, and Social Loneliness on Anxiety. Healthcare, 10(7), 1155. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare10071155

Note that from the first issue of 2016, this journal uses article numbers instead of page numbers. See further details here.

Article Metrics

Back to TopTop