New study to help bereaved caregivers


Stock image of an older man with his head in his hands. A wedding ring is visible

Within 10 years, it's estimated there will be 9 million new bereaved caregivers. Photo courtesy Canva

|

A new grant from the National Institute on Aging, a division of the National Institutes of Health, will fund research at Arizona State University to collect the largest quantitative sample of bereaved dementia caregivers to date, in order to provide tools and resources to improve their lives.

Assistant Professor Zachary Baker with ASU's Center for Innovation in Healthy and Resilient Aging is the principal investigator of the study. He says former caregivers are a growing, diverse group that often feels "ultra-invisible" as most currently available support is focused on those actively providing care.

“The reality is they lost their mom or their husband, or somebody really important to them, and as many as 25% of these former caregivers are getting clinical symptoms, and what I mean by that is not just normal grief or sadness but something that is stopping their life,” Baker said.

Even those whose symptoms don’t rise to the clinical level still suffer from higher rates of depression and loneliness. And their numbers are increasing. According to Baker, within 10 years, most people living with Alzheimer’s disease and related dementias will die, creating 9 million-plus new bereaved caregivers.

“So aside from a lot of sadness and subclinical depression and less quality of life, we’re talking about millions of people who can’t function, but nobody is talking about them or thinking about their needs,” he said.

With $726,711 in funding, this three-year study is looking to change that.

The research aims to understand first, who is going to do better or worse after the person in their care has passed away, and then try to figure out the things that people who are coping well are already doing that work for them and share those solutions with others who are struggling.

“I would love for that 'ultra-invisibility' term to be completely irrelevant,” Baker said.

Researchers are actively recruiting former dementia caregivers to join the study and working on an initiative to try to expand the study to Spanish speakers in order to reach more communities.

If you are interested in participating or know someone who might be interested, please call 602-543-4492 (x34492) or email formerdementiacare@asu.edu to learn more.

More Health and medicine

 

Rachel Larson talks to the first graduating cohort for the Home Base Warrior Health and Fitness Program

College of Health Solutions program doing its part during Salute to Service

It wasn’t always easy for Marine veteran Chuck Hale when he first returned to civilian life. But he’ll never forget the help he…

Human Mind, Getty Images

What makes human culture unique?

Why is human culture — the shared body of knowledge passed down across generations — so much more powerful than animal cultures?“…

A lecture hall where a panel of students speaks to an audience with a series of screens above them.

ASU honors students work on HPV research as part of Barrett College's largest-ever group thesis

Not every undergraduate student comes across the opportunity to do research as part of a team. Even fewer have had the chance to…