Background
The percentage of the Japanese population aged ⩾65 years is the highest in the world (23.3% in 2011) and estimated to rise further in the future (Health and Welfare Statistics Association, 2012). An increase in healthcare needs is expected to accompany this rise. The long-term care insurance system was introduced in 2000 to enable older citizens to live at home, rather than in a facility. Indeed, about 60% of the Japanese population desire to receive care at home in the comfort of their community (Health and Welfare Statistics Association, 2012). Community support allows for elderly care recipients to continue their home-based life, particularly for those with extensive care needs whose informal carers are engaged in all-day care (Cabinet Office, 2011). Providing all-day care to older people with high care needs can affect informal carers’ health as such older people become increasingly dependent on their carers. This underscores the need to place focus on and provide community support for informal carers.
The need to focus on and support informal carers of older people in long-term home-based care is not an issue unique to Japan. In fact, the proportion of the international population aged ⩾65 years is increasing, leading to increased interest in and awareness of long-term home-based care worldwide (Genet et al., Reference Genet, Boerma, Kingos, Bouman, Francke, Faserstrom, Melchiorre, Grecco and Deville2011). Thus, studies on community support for informal carers of older people with care needs have global significance.
Informal carers are supported by professional carers and services in a community providing care of older people everyday; however, there are gaps in support and provision between health policy and actual clinical situations (Imaiso et al., Reference Imaiso, Konishi and Kamata2009). Community health nurses play an advocate role in seeking appropriate legislation related to caregiving issues (Faison et al., Reference Faison, Faria and Frank1999), and must listen to the experiences and beliefs of informal carers (Imaiso and Sasaki, Reference Imaiso and Sasaki2010). Indeed, community health nurses share a close relationship with care recipients and informal carers as partners in the community and have a good understanding of the daily life of carers. The role of community health nurses is to assess carers’ health and support them and care recipients, based on information available to them. The carers’ appraisal, which assesses how informal carers perceive their daily caregiving life, is an important source of such information. Community health nurses (eg, home-visiting nurses and public health nurses), rather than social workers or GPs, are particularly suited to assessing and applying information obtained from carers’ appraisals. This is because community health nurses are capable of assessing the health status of informal carers, as well as that of care recipients, while also considering the community environment, such as the support system.
In carer appraisals, both negative and positive aspects should be considered by nurses when supporting family carers (Hunt, Reference Hunt2003). Imaiso et al. (Reference Imaiso, Tsukasaki and Okoshi2012) found that higher care burden is significantly associated with lower positive appraisal, and a lower care burden with a higher positive appraisal. Cohen et al. (Reference Cohen, Gold, Shulman and Zucchero1994) suggested that the relationship between positive and negative aspects of care is necessarily a complex one and although some positive aspects act as buffers to reduce the intensity of the burden experienced or mitigate the impact of caregiving stress on health, positive aspects might not be directly correlated with burden. Negative aspects do not necessarily equate with less positive aspects. Of concern are the highly negative and minimally positive aspects of caregiving. In addition, as the health of informal carers worsens, there is the possibility that their care recipients would no longer be able to live at home. Thus, support to reduce negative and promote positive aspects should be considered. Any factors that are negatively or positively associated with positive or negative aspects, respectively, should be examined so that informal carers who are often providing the most intense levels of care are able to maintain a healthy state of physical and mental well-being.
Several studies have focused on the negative aspects of care appraisal, such as care burden, care fatigue, and care stress. Faison et al. (Reference Faison, Faria and Frank1999) suggested that nurses need to understand gender differences related to perceived burden. According to Lee et al. (Reference Lee, Yoo and Jung2010), to reduce carer burden, nurses need to better understand the values of individual carers regarding quality of life in diverse cultures. Moreover, del-Pino-Casado et al. (Reference del-Pino-Casado, Frias-Osuna and Palomino-Moral2011) suggested that balanced reciprocity is useful for the early prevention and early intervention to mitigate subjective burden and must be included in nursing care plans for carers.
On the other hand, several nursing studies have also focused on the positive aspects, such as carer’s satisfaction, carer mastery, and enjoyment or pleasure from caregiving. To support these positive aspects, Worcester and Quayhagen (Reference Worcester and Quayhagen1983) suggested that nurses need to handle psychological and behavioral problems in the home setting, to communicate with physicians when a client is hospitalized, and to train volunteers or healthcare aids with whom carers could leave the client in order to prevent social isolation of the carer and encourage carer satisfaction. In another study, Carruth et al. (Reference Carruth, Take, Moffett and Hill1997) suggested that increasing carers’ awareness of the reciprocal nature of their relationships with all family members may be an effective strategy to help them appreciate their contribution to the well-being of their parents and help in achieving caregiving satisfaction.
Bedard et al. (Reference Bedard, Koivuranta and Stuckey2004) suggested that three determinants (ie, the characteristics of the carer, the characteristics of the care recipient, and external variables that cannot be controlled by carers themselves) must be considered as part of the carer appraisal. Five characteristics identified in appraisals of carers have been found to be significant: age (Worcester and Quayhagen, Reference Worcester and Quayhagen1983; Kurasawa et al., Reference Kurasawa, Yoshimasu, Washio, Miyai, Miyashita and Arai2007); gender (Faison et al., Reference Faison, Faria and Frank1999); relationship (del-Pino-Casado et al., Reference del-Pino-Casado, Frias-Osuna and Palomino-Moral2011); health state (Cohen et al., Reference Cohen, Gold, Shulman and Zucchero1994; Faison et al., Reference Faison, Faria and Frank1999; Tsukasaki et al., Reference Tsukasaki, Makimoto and Kido2008); and caregiving-related situations (Faison et al., Reference Faison, Faria and Frank1999; Saito et al., Reference Saito, Kunisaki and Kanagawa2001; Tsukasaki et al., Reference Tsukasaki, Makimoto and Kido2008; Lee et al., Reference Lee, Yoo and Jung2010). In relation to the care recipient, three characteristics have been found to be significant for the care relationship: age (Worcester and Quayhagen, Reference Worcester and Quayhagen1983; Lee et al., Reference Lee, Yoo and Jung2010); gender (Cohen et al., Reference Cohen, Gold, Shulman and Zucchero1994); and extent of care needs (Worcester and Quayhagen, Reference Worcester and Quayhagen1983; Faison et al., Reference Faison, Faria and Frank1999).
Considering external variables, that is, the third determinant mentioned by Bedard et al. (Reference Bedard, Koivuranta and Stuckey2004), as well as the aforementioned studies demonstrating an association between carer and care-recipient characteristics, it was hypothesized that high care burden and low positive caregiving appraisal are influenced by different independent factors. To this end, we studied factors associated with home-based negative/positive caregiving appraisals of informal carers of older people with high care needs and considered which family carers’ community health nurses should focus on, particularly when attempting to reduce the negative aspects and promote the positive aspects of caregiving.
Methods
Research design
This study was quantitative and designed to examine correlations. The study protocol was approved by the Medical Ethics Committee at Kanazawa University (27 January 2010/No. 246). All participant involvement was voluntary.
Definition of terms
Informal carer
Informal carer refers to primary family carers who live with care recipients and perform daily home-based care.
Community support
Community support refers to both formal home care services related to long-term care insurance in Japan and informal support provided by individuals other than care-recipient family members.
Study participants
Professional home care facilities (total, 767; 355 rural and 412 urban) provided from home-visiting nursing stations were selected from the Welfare and Services Network System (WAM Net) in order to cover facilities in all rural communities in 45 prefectures and all urban communities in 15 prefectures in Japan. The research protocol and participant selection process were initially proposed to the facilities by mail. Facilities that agreed to participate were considered ‘approved’ facilities. Approved facilities were also asked about the number of carers known by their facilities that they considered were eligible to participate. Each facility was provided with a written explanation of the carers’ selection criteria: primary informal carer who used the home-visiting nursing services and lived in rural or urban Japanese regions with elderly recipients (aged ⩾65 years) who required care above level 3. ‘Care above level 3’ refers to care levels determined by the long-term insurance system in Japan, with levels 3 to 5 being the highest. Level 3 care involves care for 70 min or greater but <90 min, level 4 care for 90 min or greater but <110 min, and level 5 care for 110 min and greater per day (Health and Welfare Statistics Association, 2012). Carers who met the selection criteria were recognized as eligible for recruitment in the study. From these eligible carers those who were selected by professional carers, such as home-visiting nurses at the approved facilities, participated in the present study.
Of the 398 facilities (response rate, 51.9%) that responded, 91 (22.9%) were approved, including 46 rural facilities (approval rate, 26.0% of 177 rural facilities) in 21 of 45 prefectures, and 45 urban facilities (approval rate, 20.4% of 221 urban facilities) in 14 of 15 prefectures. A total of one to five questionnaires with written explanations of the study were sent to each approved facility (total, 365; rural, 196; urban, 169) based on the number of carers each facility considered eligible to participate.
Completed questionnaires were sent directly from the carers to the researcher by mail. Of the 365 eligible carers (196 rural and 169 urban), 219 responded (60.0%). Of these, 123 (62.8%) were in rural and 96 (56.8%) were in urban communities. Carers who responded with incomplete or inappropriate answers to questions were excluded. A total of 192 (87.7%) eligible carers [103 (83.7%) rural and 89 (92.7%) urban] adequately answered all questions and were included in the study. Data were collected from April 2010 to February 2011.
Survey with appraisal of home-based caregiving
The questionnaire was confidential and self-administered. Survey items were based on the three determinants suggested by Bedard et al. (Reference Bedard, Koivuranta and Stuckey2004): carer characteristics, care recipients’ characteristic, and external variables carers cannot control. After a pretest was conducted and the questionnaire revised, the survey was finalized for participant use. Participants took about 30 min to complete the survey, which consisted of the following categories: carer characteristics (attributes, health state, situations related to caring); care-recipient characteristics; external variables (residential communities, support system for caregiving); and a home-based informal caregiving appraisal (care burden, positive caregiving appraisal). To assess depression in carers, the Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale with 20 questions was used. Scores ranged from 0 to 60, with higher scores indicating greater depression; scores ⩾16 are considered indicative of depression (McDowell and Newell, Reference McDowell and Newell1996).
With respect to the home-based caregiving appraisal, Zarit et al. (Reference Zarit, Reever and Bach-Peterson1980) provide an operational definition of caregiving burden as follows: the extent to which carers perceived their emotional or physical health, social life, and financial status as suffering as a result of caring for their relatives. The Japanese version of the Zarit Caregiver Burden Interview, a subjective scale, with 22 items was used. For each item, carers are asked to indicate how often they felt a particular way in a specific situation: never, rarely, sometimes, quite frequently, or nearly always. Scores for each item ranged from 0 (never) to 4 (almost always). Total scores ranged from 0 to 88, with a higher score indicating greater burden (Zarit et al., Reference Zarit, Reever and Bach-Peterson1980; Arai et al., Reference Arai, Kudo, Hosokawa, Washio, Miura and Hisamachi1997; Arai, Reference Arai2002). To assess positive caregiving, a positive appraisal scale with 14 items (Sakurai, Reference Sakurai1999) based on the Caregiving Satisfaction Scale (Lawton et al., Reference Lawton, Kleban, Moss, Rovine and Glicksman1989) and Self-Gain Scale (Skaff and Pealin, Reference Skaff and Pearlin1992) was used. Scores ranged from 1 to 56, with a higher score indicating more positive caregiving (Sakurai, Reference Sakurai1999). For each item, carers were asked to indicate how often they felt a particular way in a specific situation: never, rarely, a little, very much. Scores for each item ranged from 1 (never) to 4 (very much).
Analysis
Care burden does not necessarily correspond to less positive caregiving appraisal. For example, there may be instances in which care burden is high, but positive caregiving appraisal is also high, and instances in which care burden is low, but positive caregiving appraisal is also low. Therefore, negative and positive appraisal scores were analyzed separately. Normal P-P plots in negative/positive home-based caregiving appraisals are shown in Figure 1. Both care burden and positive caregiving appraisal did not show a normal distribution. For care burden, participants who scored >median score (ie, >30.0) were grouped as having high care burden, and those who scored ⩽median score (ie, ⩽30.0) were grouped as having low care burden. For positive appraisal, participants who scored ⩾median score (ie, ⩾39.0) were grouped as having high positive caregiving appraisal, and those who scored <median score (ie, <39.0) were grouped as having low positive caregiving appraisal. The association between high/low groups of care burden and positive caregiving appraisal was determined by binominal regression analysis. Factors that differed between rural and urban communities were examined with the χ 2-test.
To determine the positive factors associated with care burden and negative factors associated with positive caregiving appraisal, multinomial regression analysis was performed. High and low informal caregiving appraisals (care burden and positive caregiving appraisal) were set separately as dependent variables, based on confirmed correlations from 25 survey items, and 17 items were set as independent variables (Table 1). Stepwise regression and backward elimination was then performed.
CES-D=Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale.
1 Refers to supporters of primary carers in families.
2 Refers to the number of six possible formal home care services used: home-visit caregiving, home-visit rehabilitation, day services, day care, home-visit bath, or short stay.
Statistical analysis was conducted using SPSS 17.0 for Windows (Japanese). P-values <0.05 were considered significant.
Results
Participant characteristics
Participant characteristics are shown in Table 1. Of the 192 primary informal carers, 102 (53.1%) were aged ⩾65 years, 146 (76.0%) were female, 83 (43.2%) were spouses, and 34 (17.7%) were daughters-in-law. The mean caregiving duration was 6.6±5.9 years. Of the 192 care recipients, 120 (62.5%) were female.
With respect to external variables, of the 192 primary informal carers, 103 (53.6%) lived in a rural community and 119 (62.0%) had assistant carers in the family. The mean number of formal home care services used was 2.2±1.1; 38 (19.8%) received neighborhood support and 33 (17.2%) felt conscious of sekentei or social pressure to provide care.
Home-based caregiving appraisals
Results for home-based caregiving appraisals are summarized in Table 2. The mean care burden score was 33.3±18.3 and the median was 30.0. Of the 192 participants, 95 (49.5%) were in the high care burden group and 97 (50.5%) were in the low care burden group. The mean positive caregiving appraisal score was 39.0±9.0 and the median was 39.0; 102 (53.1%) were in the high positive appraisal group and 90 (46.9%) were in the low positive appraisal group.
B=unstandardized β coefficient; SD=standard deviation.
n=192.
*P<0.05.
High/low care burden groups were negatively associated with high/low positive caregiving appraisal groups. The high care burden group was associated with the low positive caregiving appraisal group, and the low care burden group was associated with the high caregiving appraisal group.
Factors that differ between rural and urban communities
Factors affecting carers in rural and urban communities are shown in Table 3. Factors that significantly differed between these communities were: relationship, education, assistant carers in the family, and number of formal home care services. Compared with urban communities, there were more spouse and daughter-in-law carers, carers had less education, there were more assistant carers in the family, and there was less use of formal home care services in rural communities.
CES-D=Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale.
*P<0.05.
Factors associated with negative/positive home-based caregiving appraisals
Factors associated with care burden are shown in Table 4. Positive significant factors associated with care burden were: sekentei or social pressure [odds ratio (OR)=4.25, 95% confidence interval (CI)=1.39–13.04], caregiving obligation (OR=3.11, 95% CI=1.43–6.77), spouse carer (OR=2.58, 95% CI=1.05–6.35), daughter-in-law carer (OR=3.68, 95% CI=1.31–10.34), and depression (OR=50.58, 95% CI=13.85–184.67). Goodness of fit of the model was 79.7%.
B=unstandardized β coefficient; SD=standard deviation; OR=odds ratio; CI=confidence interval.
Reference is the low care burden group.
Model χ 2-test (likelihood ratio test); P-value, 0.000; goodness of fit, 79.7%.
*P<0.05, **P<0.01, ***P<0.001.
Factors associated with positive caregiving appraisals are shown in Table 5. Negative factors significantly associated with positive caregiving appraisals were: caregiving obligation (OR=0.29, 95% CI=0.15–0.53), male carer (OR=0.44, 95% CI=0.21–0.92), and daughter-in-law carer (OR=0.29, 95% CI=0.12–0.74). Goodness of fit of the model was 66.1%.
B=unstandardized β coefficient; SD=standard deviation; OR=odds ratio; CI=confidence interval.
Reference is the low positive caregiving appraisal group.
Model χ 2-test (likelihood ratio test); P-value, 0.000; goodness of fit, 66.1%.
*P<0.05, **P<0.01, ***P<0.001.
Independent associated factors that significantly differed between care burden and caregiving appraisal were sekentei or social pressure, spouse carer and depression for high care burden, and male carer for lower positive caregiving appraisal.
Discussion
The physical and mental fitness of informal carers not only permits older care recipients to continue living at home but also enhances quality of life for the carers themselves. Informal carers of older people with care needs above level 3, in particular, should have their health monitored, as caregiving at this level has the greatest impact on their daily lives and the lives of their care recipients. Daily caregiving may lead not only to negative feelings, but positive feelings as well. Thus, both negative and positive aspects of home-based caregiving must be considered. Professional carers involved in home care, particularly community health nurses, have the capacity to assess informal carer’s health by considering circumstances surrounding informal carers and care recipients, as well as carer and care-recipient characteristics, in order to reduce negative feelings and promote positive feelings of informal carers. To assist in this, the current study made use of home-based caregiving appraisals, which considered the emotional aspects of caring and searched for associated factors.
Home-based caregiving appraisals
In the current study, the median score in the care burden group was 30.0, and the mean score was 33.3±18.3. In contrast, the median score in the positive caregiving appraisal group was 39.0, and the mean score was 39.0±9.0.
A normal distribution was not observed for care burden or positive caregiving appraisal. There may have been bias in selecting carers in the current study. For example, it is possible that carers who had good relationships with home-visiting nurses or home care facilities and who care for older people with a positive attitude were selected and that, as a result, scores for care burden may have been lower and scores for positive caregiving appraisal higher in these carers.
Factors associated with home-based caregiving appraisals
There was a difference in factors associated with care burden and positive caregiving appraisals. Among factors positively associated with care burden were sekentei or social pressure, spouse carers, and depression. That is, informal carers who felt high care burden were conscious of sekentei or social pressure in their caregiving, were spouses and were depressed. It is possible that spouse carers do not use sufficient formal or informal support resources because they are conscious of sekentei or social pressure and fall into a depressed state, and are thus in the high care burden category. Moreover, it is possible that spouse carers of older care recipients are themselves elderly, and thus their own health could be more significantly affected by the care burden.
Bushy (Reference Bushy2000) previously reported that informal carers in rural communities tend to experience social pressure to care for family and resist formal community support. In the current study, although sekentei or social pressure was not a significantly different factor between rural and urban communities, it was a positive factor associated with care burden. One possibility is that sekentei or social pressure for caregiving leads carers to avoid using community resources given the mindset that they themselves must perform the care duties, which leads to a higher care burden. The important issue may be what the whole community (ie, rural or urban) understands about home-based informal caregiving work, rather than the views of the actual community that informal carers and care recipients live in. On the other hand, in rural communities, social support, that is, formal home care services, tends to be of lower quality and quantity than that available in urban communities. In the current study, formal home care support was used less in rural communities compared with urban communities. Thus, another important issue is the type of home care support available in the community.
Being a male carer was a factor negatively associated with positive caregiving appraisal. Indeed, positive caregiving appraisal was low among male carers. Kramer (Reference Kramer1997) suggested that men and women differ across a number of variables such as health, social support, and coping strategies in caregiving appraisals. Faison et al. (Reference Faison, Faria and Frank1999) reported that male carers may decrease care burden by adapting a more task-oriented and problem-solving approach to caregiving than women. In the current study, however, being a male carer was a negative independent factor in positive caregiving appraisals. This may reflect the possibility that male carers have difficulty promoting the positive aspects and reducing the negative aspects of caregiving.
Support by community health nurses
The findings of this study suggest that community health nurses need to assess informal carers’ health by focusing on whether informal carers, particularly spouse carers, avoid getting appropriate formal or informal support services to reduce their high care burden due to being conscious of sekentei or social pressure in caregiving. Moreover, community health nurses should understand what male carers feel when providing care and support them in order to increase positive caregiving appraisals.
Community health nurses (eg, home-visiting nurses and public health nurses) should assess the extent to which a community understands home-based informal caregiving work; whether informal carers are conscious of sekentei or social pressure in their caregiving, and understand community environments (eg, the support systems available) in which informal carers and care recipients, live in order to reduce care burden. Community health nurses also need to understand the types of social resources that are available in communities. If informal carers cannot effectively use community support resources due to social pressure, community health nurses must coordinate with care managers, social workers, care management organizations, and non-professional carers to ensure that such carers receive adequate community support.
Strengths of the study
There are three strengths of this study. First, the current study analyzed both negative and positive aspects of caregiving appraisals by informal carers. Second, we have provided evidence through data collection in Japan of factors associated with negative/positive home-based caregiving appraisals: the type of residential community (rural/urban) in Japan; community support, and primary informal carer and care-recipient characteristics. Third, the community support that community health nurses should provide to informal carers was clarified.
Limitations
This study has some limitations worth noting. First, participants were not recruited from all prefectures with rural or urban communities in Japan. Instead, participants were selected from 21 of 45 prefectures (46.7%) with rural communities and 14 of 15 prefectures (93.3%) with urban communities, that is, from the prefectures that volunteered to participate. Thus, the results may have limited generalizability.
Second, there is a possibility of bias in the selection of carers who had good relationships with home-visiting nurses or home care facilities. Participant selection was based on the use of home-visiting nursing services because the purpose of this study was to consider how nurses should support such carers. Yet, it is possible that home-based caregiving appraisals would have differed if the study selected for participants who did not use or could not use home-visiting nursing services. Given this possibility, the study population was probably not a representative population of the population of all informal carers.
Third, there is a possibility that respondents exaggerated the burden they perceived in order to receive more support, particularly because the care provider administered the questionnaire to participants.
Conclusions
This study surveyed 192 Japanese primary informal carers of older people with high care needs to assess the negative and positive aspects of the carers role through use of a home-based caregiving appraisal. Positive significant factors associated with care burden included sekentei or social pressure, caregiving obligation, spouse and daughter-in-law carers, and depression. Negative factors associated with positive caregiving appraisals included caregiving obligation, male carers, and daughter-in-law carers. This study suggests that community health nurses should increase their awareness of informal carers’ feelings toward caregiving duties, assess their health to reduce negative aspects and promote positive aspects of caregiving, and prevent deterioration of the physical and mental health of informal carers.
Acknowledgements
This study was a part of a March 2012 doctoral dissertation for the Graduate Course of Nursing Sciences, Division of Health Sciences, in the Graduate School of Medical Science at Kanazawa University, Japan. Part of this article was presented at the 24th International Nursing Research Congress in Prague, Czech Republic, by the Sigma Theta Tau International Honor Society of Nursing from 22 to 26 July 2013. The author is grateful to the family carers for their participation in the study and to the staff at the home-visit nursing stations and other home-care facilities for their cooperation. The author would also like to thank Kanazawa University, particularly Professor Keiko Tsukasaki, DSN, PHN, RN.