AI Article Synopsis

  • - Caregivers of individuals with dementia experience significantly worse sleep compared to the general population, as suggested by various studies that measured self-reported sleep quality and caregiver burden.
  • - A systematic scoping review examined literature on this issue, finding that out of 540 articles screened, 24 met the criteria for inclusion, with most studies indicating a positive correlation between caregiver burden and poorer self-reported sleep quality.
  • - Despite subjective reports indicating sleep issues, there is limited evidence connecting caregiver burden to objective sleep measures; healthcare providers should acknowledge the impact of caregiver burden on sleep and address it in care strategies.

Article Abstract

Background And Objectives: Caregivers of persons with dementia report worse sleep when compared to the general population. The objective of this review was to synthesize evidence regarding the link between caregiver burden and dementia caregivers' sleep.

Research Design And Methods: We conducted a scoping review using a systematic search for pertinent literature in PubMed, CINAHL, and Web of Science through March 2022. Keywords included content areas of dementia, caregiver burden, and sleep. Inclusion criteria were informal caregivers of persons living with dementia, a measured relationship between informal dementia caregiver sleep and subjective caregiver burden variables, and original research. Non-English studies were excluded. Extracted data were organized in tables, compared, and synthesized.

Results: The search yielded 540 nonduplicate articles screened by title and abstract; 118 full-text articles were reviewed; 24 were included. Most studies were cross-sectional, with variable sample sizes. Dementia caregivers had significantly poorer overall perceived sleep than noncaregivers across 4 studies that examined self-reported sleep measures. Eighteen studies investigated the association between caregiver burden and self-reported sleep quality, with 14 reporting a significant positive association between caregiver burden and self-reported sleep quality, and 4 finding null results. Only 2 of the 4 studies reporting the association between caregiver burden and objective sleep parameters (ie, actigraphy and polysomnography) reported a significant positive association for at least one sleep subdomain.

Discussion And Implications: Although subjective sleep quality is commonly affected by dementia caregiving burden, there is a lack of corresponding evidence on the relationship between burden and objective sleep metrics. Healthcare providers should consider the dementia caregiver burden's impact on sleep and regularly assess caregivers' sleep difficulties. Future studies should focus on consistently measuring caregiver burden and sleep to promote dementia caregiver health and well-being.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10901478PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/geroni/igae005DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

caregiver burden
32
dementia caregiver
16
sleep
15
caregivers persons
12
self-reported sleep
12
association caregiver
12
sleep quality
12
burden
10
dementia
10
caregiver
10

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!