Rural Family Caregiving: A Closer Look at the Impacts of Health, Care Work, Financial Distress, and Social Loneliness on Anxiety
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Methods
2.1. Design
2.2. Setting
2.3. Participants and Recruitment
2.3.1. Qualitative Interviews
2.3.2. Quantitative Survey
2.4. Data Collection
2.5. Data Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Overview of the Qualitative Findings
3.2. Qualitative Results
3.2.1. Overarching Theme 1: Rural Communities Are a Circle of Support
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]
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]
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.
3.2.2. Overarching Theme 2: Coping with Fewer Services
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]
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]
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]
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]
3.2.3. Theme 1: Increases in Care Time and Complexity
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]
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]
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
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]
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]
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]
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.
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]
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]
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]
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
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]
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]
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
3.3.2. Regression Models
4. Discussion
Limitations
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Caregiver | Person Cared for |
---|---|
| Mother lives in a lodge |
| Mother lives independently alone in family home |
| Mother resides in long-term care |
| Mother lives independently alone in a condo |
| Mother resides in long-term care |
| Husband in their community home |
| Mother resides in long-term care |
| Father resides in long-term care |
| Child immunocompromised resides in their community home |
| Husband resides in their community home |
| Child with disabilities resides in their community home |
| Husband and two children with disabilities residing in their community home |
| Adult daughter, disabled since birth living in the community |
| Mother and father living in their own home |
Caregiver Factors | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Caregiver Factors | Total | Anxiety Low < 40 | Anxiety Moderate–High 41+ | Chi-Square p | |
Sex | Total | 114 | 39 (34%) | 75 (66%) | 0.30 |
Female | 103 (90%) | 34 (33%) | 69 (67%) | ||
Male | 11 (10%) | 5 (46%) | 6 (54%) | ||
Age | 114 | 39 (34%) | 75 (66%) | 0.39 | |
15–64 y | 79 (69%) | 25 (64%) | 54 (72%) | ||
≥65 y | 35 (31%) | 14 (40%) | 21 (28%) | ||
Education | Total | 114 | 39 (34%) | 75 (66%) | 0.58 |
High school or less | 17 (15%) | 6 (35%) | 11 (65%) | ||
College University, Technical | 79 (63%) | 25 (32%) | 54 (68%) | ||
Post-graduate | 18 (16%) | 8 (44%) | 10 (56%) | ||
Weekly Care time | 112 | 39 (35%) | 73 (65%) | ||
Less than 10 h wk | 46 (41%) | 22 (56%) | 24 (33%) | ||
11 to 20 h wk | 14 (12%) | 3 (8%) | 11 (15%) | ||
21–40 h wk | 20 (18%) | 7 (18%) | 13 (18%) | ||
41–120 h wk | 21 (19%) | 5 (13%) | 16 (23%) | ||
121–168 h wk | 11 (10%) | 2 (5%) | 9 (12%) | ||
Weekly Care time dichotomized | 112 | 39 (35%) | 73 (65%) | 0.10 | |
≤20 h | 60 (54%) | 25 (42%) | 35 (58%) | ||
≥21 h | 52 (46%) | 14 (27%) | 38 (73%) | ||
Changes in care since COVID-19 (only those who were caring before March 2020. | 110 | 38 (35%) | 72 (65%) | 0.03 | |
More care | 54 (49%) | 12 (31%) | 42 (58%) | ||
Same care | 35 (32%) | 17 (45%) | 18 (25%) | ||
Less care | 21 (19%) | 9 (24%) | 12 (17%) | ||
Length of caregiving | 119 | ||||
Mean (SD) | 8.2 (7.57) | ||||
Median | 5.0 | ||||
Mode | 3.0 | ||||
Social Loneliness | |||||
There are few people I can rely on when I have problems | 112 | 38 (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 | 114 | 39 (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 | 114 | 39 (34%) | 75 (66%) | <0.001 | |
Enough people I feel close to | 39 (34%) | 25 (64%) | 14 (19%) | ||
Not enough people I am close to | 75 (66%) | 14 (36%) | 61 (81%) | ||
Physical Health Deteriorated | 113 | 39 (35%) | 74 (65%) | 0.01 | |
Deteriorated | 62 (55%) | 15 (39%) | 47 (64%) | ||
Same Improved | 51 (45%) | 24 (51%) | 27 (36%) | ||
Mental Health Deteriorated | 114 | 39 (34%) | 75 (66%) | <0.001 | |
Deteriorated | 77 (68%) | 13 (33%) | 64 (85%) | ||
Same Improved | 37 (32%) | 26 (67%) | 11 (15%) | ||
Frailty Caregivers | 111 | 38 (34%) | 73 (66%) | <0.001 | |
Not Frail 1–3 | 76 (68%) | 36 (95%) | 40 (55%) | ||
Frail 4–7 | 35 (32%) | 2 (5%) | 32 (44%) | ||
Very Frail | 1 (1%) | 1 (1%) | |||
Financial difficulties | 114 | 39 (34%) | 75 (66%) | 0.01 | |
No difficulty | 39 (34%) | 26 (67%) | 31 (41%) | ||
Difficulty | 75 (66%) | 13 (33%) | 44 (59%) | ||
Ability to navigate the systems | 113 | 38 (34%) | 75 (66%) | 0.23 | |
Not confident | 22 (19%) | 5 (23%) | 17 (77%) | ||
Confident | 91 (81%) | 33 (36%) | 58 (64%) | ||
Confident | 98 (88%) | 37 (38%) | 61 (62%) | ||
Care-Receiver Factors | |||||
Care-Receiver Factors | Total | Anxiety Low < 40 | Anxiety Moderate–High 41+ | Chi-Square p | |
Residence | 112 | 39 (35%) | 73 (65%) | 0.08 | |
Community | 75 (67%) | 22 (29%) | 53 (71%) | ||
Congregate Care | 37 (33%) | 17 (46%) | 20 (54%) | ||
Age | 108 | 37 (34%) | 71 (66%) | 0.06 | |
≤24 y | 14 (13%) | 1 (7%) | 13 (93%) | ||
25–64 y | 21 (19%) | 6 (29%) | 15 (71%) | ||
65–84 y | 42 (39%) | 15 (38%) | 27 (64%) | ||
≥85 y | 31 (29%) | 15 (48%) | 16 (52%) | ||
Number of health conditions | 107 | 37 (35%) | 70 (65%) | 0.14 | |
1–2 | 70 (65%) | 26 (37%) | 44 (63%) | ||
3–4 | 30 (37%) | 11 (37%) | 19 (63%) | ||
≥5 | 7 (7%) | 0 (00%) | 7 (100%) | ||
Frailty | 109 | 38 (35%) | 71 (65%) | 0.89 | |
Active 1–3 | 16 (15%) | 6 (38%) | 10 (62%) | ||
Frail 4–6 | 38 (35%) | 14 (37%) | 24 (63%) | ||
Severely Frail 7–9 | 55 (18%) | 18 (33%) | 37 (67%) |
Beta | 95.0% 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, 7.05 | 0.900 |
Age | −0.148 | −3.49, 0.13 | 0.038 |
Care Time | 0.150 | −0.172, 3.17 | 0.078 |
Frailty | 0.404 | 2.86, 6.95 | <0.001 |
Financial hardship | 0.227 | 0.867, 5.68 | 0.009 |
Model 3 | 0.001 | ||
Gender | −0.010 | −7.64, 6.65 | 0.891 |
Age | −0.165 | −3.61, −0.16 | 0.032 |
Care Time | 0.102 | −0.581, 2.61 | 0.210 |
Frailty | 3.853 | 1.89, 5.92 | <0.001 |
Financial hardship | 0.197 | 0.545, 5.23 | 0.016 |
Navigation confidence | −0.076 | −3.27, 1.05 | 0.311 |
Social loneliness | 0.273 | 1.37, 4.90 | <0.001 |
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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
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 StyleL’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 StyleL’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