Caregiver Speaks: A Technologically Mediated Storytelling Intervention for Family Caregivers ofIndividuals with Alzheimer's Disease and Other Dementias

NIH RePORTER · NIH · R01 · $724,627 · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

Caregiver Speaks: A Technologically Mediated Storytelling Intervention for Family Caregivers of Individuals with Alzheimer’s Disease and Other Dementias ABSTRACT This randomized controlled trial will test an intervention for an understudied population – family caregivers of persons living with dementia (PLWD). This project is the first of its kind to longitudinally follow family caregivers of PLWD into bereavement. Furthermore, the intervention, Caregiver Speaks, employs an innovative storytelling approach – photo elicitation (the use of photos to elicit thoughts, feelings, and reactions to a person’s experience) – to encourage family caregivers to make meaning of their caregiving and bereavement experiences as a way of reducing depression, anxiety, and ultimately grief intensity. Caregiver Speaks is deployed via a readily available social media network (Facebook), which allows easy access for already overburdened family caregivers of PLWD, and can improve their social support. Preliminary work demonstrates that 1) this project is feasible as an RCT intervention study of caregiver experiences, 2) the research team can conduct this type of storytelling intervention via Facebook, and 3) family caregivers use (and want to use) social media during active caregiving and into bereavement, despite their heavy care burdens. The research team will base the proposal on Park and Folkman’s meaning-making model of stress and coping. This model illustrates how individuals cope with adverse life events (i.e., trauma, or death of a loved one) by reconstructing and transforming the event’s meaning and incorporating the reappraised meaning into one’s larger self-narrative. Caregiver Speaks uses storytelling in the form of photo-elicitation, in order to facilitate this meaning-making. Caregivers share photos and discussions regarding their caregiving and bereavement experiences in a private, facilitated Facebook group. This model suggests that caregivers’ ability to make sense of (meaning making), and find benefit in an adverse life situation (caregiving and bereavement) will be validated through social support, and result in reduced depression, anxiety, and grief intensity. Caregivers will be randomly assigned to either: 1) Group 1, which will receive the Caregiver Speaks intervention, or 2) Group 2, which will receive standard care, including the standard care for bereavement. The research team will use both quantitative and qualitative methods in parallel and equal status to measure the intervention’s efficacy. The overall hypothesis is that participating in Caregiver Speaks during caregiving and into bereavement will reduce caregivers’ depression and anxiety, and as a result will reduce grief intensity in bereavement. The three specific aims are to: 1) determine the efficacy of the Caregiver Speaks intervention in reducing depression and anxiety among family caregivers of people with dementia, 2) examine the intervention’s effect on grief intensity among berea...

Key facts

NIH application ID
10470920
Project number
5R01AG059818-03
Recipient
WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY
Principal Investigator
Debra Parker Oliver
Activity code
R01
Funding institute
NIH
Fiscal year
2022
Award amount
$724,627
Award type
5
Project period
2020-02-01 → 2024-11-30