Background: Social isolation due to COVID-19 pandemic has an important psychological impact particularly in persons with dementia and their informal caregivers.

Aim: To assess frequency and severity of long-term stress-related symptoms in caregivers of patients with dementia 1-year after the beginning of COVID-19 pandemic and to identify predictors of psychological outcomes.

Methods: Eighty-five caregivers were involved in a longitudinal study with 1-year follow-up during pandemic in Italy. At baseline in April 2020 a telephone interview assessed socio-demographic characteristics of caregivers and self-perception of distress symptoms. After 1 year, between March and April 2021, the same standardized interview was delivered to the caregivers' sample. In addition, scales assessing levels of depression and anxiety (DASS-21), sleep disturbances (PSQI) and coping strategies (COPE-NVI) were administered to the caregivers and to 50 age and sex-matched non-caregivers subjects. Linear regression analysis was performed to investigate the power of baseline variables to predict long-term psychological outcomes.

Results: After 1 year of pandemic frequency of caregivers' stress-related symptoms increased respect to baseline: depression (60 vs. 5, 9%; < 0.001), anxiety (45, 9 vs. 29, 4%; = 0.035), irritability (49, 4 vs. 24, 7%; < 0.001), and anguish (31, 7 vs. 10, 6%; < 0.001). Frequency of severe depression was higher in caregivers than in non-caregivers ( = 0.002) although mean levels of depression were comparable in the two groups. Long-term higher depression was predicted by a model built on baseline information (r = 0.53, < 0.001) where being female (t = -3.61, < 0.001), having lower education (t = -2.15, = 0.04), presence of feelings of overwhelm (t = 2.29, = 0.02) and isolation (t = 2.12, = 0.04) were significant predictors. Female sex was also predictive of anxiety (t = -2.7, = 0.01) and poor sleep quality (t = -2.17, = 0.03).

Discussion: At 1 year follow-up caregivers of patients with dementia reported higher prevalence of all stress-related symptoms respect to the acute phase of lockdown, particularly depression. Long-lasting stressful conditions may cause exhaustion of resilience factors and increased depression. Planning interventions should support caregivers to enable them to continue with their role during pandemic.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8866969PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpsyt.2022.826371DOI Listing

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