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COVID-19-related loneliness, social isolation and burden in informal caregivers worldwide

Chen, Yaohua Sophie ; Almirall-Sanchez, Arianna ; Ilinca, Stefania ; Grycuk, Emilia ; Higgins, Dawn ; Leon, Tomas ; McGlinchey, Eimear ; Rogan, Carol ; Saha, Sanjib LU and Tjin, Anna , et al. (2022) In Alzheimer's and Dementia 18(S8).
Abstract

Background: Informal caregivers may experience high levels burden. Prior to COVID-19, loneliness and social isolation, and especially the discordance between them, were recognized for rapid aging-related cognitive decline. The COVID-19 has significantly increased social isolation and loneliness in caregivers. Thus, we aimed to explore the variables that were associated with higher care burden among all caregivers and only among caregivers for people living with dementia, and whether the increased burden could be associated with a discrepancy between loneliness and social isolation. Method: ‘Comparing Loneliness and Isolation in COVID-19’ was an online global survey of over 20,000 respondents, including 5243 caregivers across 50... (More)

Background: Informal caregivers may experience high levels burden. Prior to COVID-19, loneliness and social isolation, and especially the discordance between them, were recognized for rapid aging-related cognitive decline. The COVID-19 has significantly increased social isolation and loneliness in caregivers. Thus, we aimed to explore the variables that were associated with higher care burden among all caregivers and only among caregivers for people living with dementia, and whether the increased burden could be associated with a discrepancy between loneliness and social isolation. Method: ‘Comparing Loneliness and Isolation in COVID-19’ was an online global survey of over 20,000 respondents, including 5243 caregivers across 50 countries with enduring brain or/and physical health conditions. We first used a multilevel modelling to identify risk factors associated with higher burden. Then, we defined profiles of discrepancy between loneliness and social isolation, based on the differences between standardized score on a scale of loneliness and of social connectedness and estimated the association between the discrepancy and higher burden. Result: In our sample, 74% of caregivers were female, 44% were caring for people with dementia, and 22% for people with multiple conditions, including dementia. The most prevalent age group was 60-69 years old. Factors significantly associated with higher care burden were being female, having poorer financial situation, worse mental health during the pandemic, caring for people with dementia or intellectual disabilities, caring in the same home, being diagnosed with COVID, and changes of care abilities. 40% of caregivers consistently reported high level of loneliness and social isolation, 38% reported consistent lower levels of both, and two groups reported discordance (low levels of loneliness and high social isolation in 13%; high levels of loneliness and mild social isolation in 12%). The latter group was at the highest risk of self-reported increased and intense care burden. Conclusion: This represents the largest, most widespread survey on the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on caregivers of people with long-term conditions to date and reflects the importance of capturing the nuances in the relationship between loneliness and social isolation in caregivers. It will be an important resource for support agencies and to inform policy.

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organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
in
Alzheimer's and Dementia
volume
18
issue
S8
article number
e064194
publisher
Wiley
external identifiers
  • scopus:85144422569
ISSN
1552-5260
DOI
10.1002/alz.064194
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
e48733a9-fcf3-48e4-aa08-31989f0281f2
date added to LUP
2023-01-13 08:50:32
date last changed
2023-01-13 08:50:57
@misc{e48733a9-fcf3-48e4-aa08-31989f0281f2,
  abstract     = {{<p>Background: Informal caregivers may experience high levels burden. Prior to COVID-19, loneliness and social isolation, and especially the discordance between them, were recognized for rapid aging-related cognitive decline. The COVID-19 has significantly increased social isolation and loneliness in caregivers. Thus, we aimed to explore the variables that were associated with higher care burden among all caregivers and only among caregivers for people living with dementia, and whether the increased burden could be associated with a discrepancy between loneliness and social isolation. Method: ‘Comparing Loneliness and Isolation in COVID-19’ was an online global survey of over 20,000 respondents, including 5243 caregivers across 50 countries with enduring brain or/and physical health conditions. We first used a multilevel modelling to identify risk factors associated with higher burden. Then, we defined profiles of discrepancy between loneliness and social isolation, based on the differences between standardized score on a scale of loneliness and of social connectedness and estimated the association between the discrepancy and higher burden. Result: In our sample, 74% of caregivers were female, 44% were caring for people with dementia, and 22% for people with multiple conditions, including dementia. The most prevalent age group was 60-69 years old. Factors significantly associated with higher care burden were being female, having poorer financial situation, worse mental health during the pandemic, caring for people with dementia or intellectual disabilities, caring in the same home, being diagnosed with COVID, and changes of care abilities. 40% of caregivers consistently reported high level of loneliness and social isolation, 38% reported consistent lower levels of both, and two groups reported discordance (low levels of loneliness and high social isolation in 13%; high levels of loneliness and mild social isolation in 12%). The latter group was at the highest risk of self-reported increased and intense care burden. Conclusion: This represents the largest, most widespread survey on the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on caregivers of people with long-term conditions to date and reflects the importance of capturing the nuances in the relationship between loneliness and social isolation in caregivers. It will be an important resource for support agencies and to inform policy.</p>}},
  author       = {{Chen, Yaohua Sophie and Almirall-Sanchez, Arianna and Ilinca, Stefania and Grycuk, Emilia and Higgins, Dawn and Leon, Tomas and McGlinchey, Eimear and Rogan, Carol and Saha, Sanjib and Tjin, Anna and Galvin, Miriam and O'Sullivan, Roger and Lawlor, Brian and Leroi, Iracema}},
  issn         = {{1552-5260}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{S8}},
  publisher    = {{Wiley}},
  series       = {{Alzheimer's and Dementia}},
  title        = {{COVID-19-related loneliness, social isolation and burden in informal caregivers worldwide}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/alz.064194}},
  doi          = {{10.1002/alz.064194}},
  volume       = {{18}},
  year         = {{2022}},
}