Results: 121

For: family carers

The costs of care prior to institutionalisation among people living with Alzheimer’s disease

11180356596_99cd1af01c_o

The past few decades have seen a gradual shift of provision of services for older people from residential care to community-based care in the UK and other high-income countries. ‘Ageing in place’ is a widely accepted and supported discourse. In practice, receiving care at home enables older people to stay in a familiar environment, and [read the full story…]

Open Dialogue: what’s the evidence?

african-3988949_1920

Sameer Jauhar and colleagues critically assess the evidence for Open Dialogue, presented in a recent narrative review of quantitative and qualitative studies, which finds that most current studies are highly biased and of low quality, and there is an absence of clear data on effectiveness.

[read the full story...]

Psychosis and physical health: listening to patients and family carers

sculpture-3365574_1280

Shuichi Suetani and Sharon Lawn explore a recent viewpoint article on physical health problems in psychosis, which asks: Is it time to consider the views of family carers?

[read the full story...]

Sleep problems in dementia: a promising treatment?

Silvestro_Lega_-_Mazzini_morente,_1873

A group of UCL Masters Students summarise the DREAMS-START trial (Dementia RElAted Manual for Sleep; STrAtegies for RelaTives), which looks at the feasibility and acceptability of a simple 6 session intervention delivered by psychology graduates for people with dementia and their carers affected by sleep disturbances.

[read the full story...]

‘Well – what do you know?’ Insights into information work among carers of people living with dementia

carers information

Jill Manthorpe’s blog considers findings from a scoping review and institutional ethnography of the ‘information work’ done by family carers of community-dwelling older adults living with dementia, by Dalmer (2018).

[read the full story...]

Sense of coherence and mental health of caregivers: a systematic review and meta-analysis

289477-P6O1TF-812

Martin Webber looks at a systematic review and meta-analysis of studies reporting on the association between informal carers’ sense of coherence, caregiver burden and mental health outcomes.

[read the full story...]

Behavioural and psychological symptoms of dementia: GPs’ perspective on management

woman-65675_1920

Marie Crabbe presents the findings of a mixed-methods systematic review, which looks at General Practitioners’ knowledge, attitudes and experiences of managing behavioural and psychological symptoms of dementia.

[read the full story...]

Family therapy for adolescent self-harm: SHIFT trial says it doesn’t reduce hospital visits and isn’t cost-effective

guillermo-sanchez-630049-unsplash

Udita Iyengar and Dennis Ougrin consider the findings of the SHIFT trial, which explored the effectiveness of systemic family therapy versus treatment as usual for young people after self-harm.

[read the full story...]

Family therapy for anorexia: can it create closeness and containment in parent-adolescent relationships?

4851834514_023b05711a_b

Sarah McDonald blogs about a recent study that explores the effect of family-based treatment for anorexia on familial relationships.

[read the full story...]

Family involvement in acute mental health care

2380929432_b8d054c604_b

Alison Faulkner carefully considers a recent collaborative conceptual review, which asks why and how families should get involved in acute mental health care.

[read the full story...]