Little is known about heart failure (HF) caregiver self-care. This article reports a secondary analysis of data from a cross-sectional, descriptive study involving 530 HF caregivers. A three-step latent class mixture model identified HF caregiver classes at risk for poor self-care and examined the relationship between the identified self-care classes and caregiver burden and depression. Caregivers completed online surveys on self-care, caregiver burden, depression, problem-solving, social support, and family function. Caregivers were 41.39 (±10.38) years old, 78.3% Caucasian, and 50.9% men. Three classes of HF caregivers (24% , 24.9% , 51.1% ) were identified. caregivers had the worst self-care and the lowest levels of social support, problem-solving, and family function. caregivers were the most experienced and had the best self-care yet had the most comorbidities. caregivers reported more caregiver burden and depression. "At-risk" caregivers may benefit from self-care and support programs, but more research is needed.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1054773820973121DOI Listing

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