Applicability of the pre-death grief concept to dementia family caregivers in Asia.

Tau Ming Liew
Author Information
  1. Tau Ming Liew: Department of Geriatric Psychiatry, Institute of Mental Health, Singapore.

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Pre-death grief is prevalent among dementia family caregivers. When unaddressed, it produces adverse outcomes. With its research primarily conducted in Caucasians, its applicability to non-Caucasians is uncertain. We explore the existence and the characteristics of pre-death grief in a multi-ethnic Asian population using an established pre-death grief scale-Marwit-Meuser Caregiver Grief Inventory (MM-CGI).
METHODS: Seventy-two dementia family caregivers were recruited from a tertiary hospital. Existence of pre-death grief was shown by its measurability on MM-CGI, together with good internal consistency reliability and construct validity. Characteristics of pre-death grief were explored through multivariate linear regression of MM-CGI and by comparing MM-CGI scores with those from the original US study using one-sample T-test.
RESULTS: In the Asian context, pre-death grief was measurable in a reliable and valid manner. Risk factors of pre-death grief included caring for patients with severe dementia, spousal relationship and secondary or below education. Influence of culture was palpable-Asians had more worries and felt isolation, and certain ethnicity showed more pre-death grief.
CONCLUSIONS: Pre-death grief is applicable even to the non-Caucasian population. It bears much similarity to that in Caucasians. Yet, its expression is modified by culture. Clinicians working with non-Caucasian populations need to be sensitive to its presence and to the influence of culture on its expression. © 2015 The Authors. International Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry published by John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

Keywords

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MeSH Term

Aged
Anxiety
Asia
Attitude to Death
Caregivers
Cross-Sectional Studies
Dementia
Educational Status
Emotions
Female
Grief
Humans
Interpersonal Relations
Male
Middle Aged
Regression Analysis
Reproducibility of Results
Risk Factors

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0griefpre-deathdementiaMM-CGIfamilycaregiversculturePre-deathCaucasiansAsianpopulationusingCaregiverGriefInventorynon-CaucasianexpressionAsiaOBJECTIVE:prevalentamongunaddressedproducesadverseoutcomesresearchprimarilyconductedapplicabilitynon-Caucasiansuncertainexploreexistencecharacteristicsmulti-ethnicestablishedscale-Marwit-MeuserMETHODS:Seventy-tworecruitedtertiaryhospitalExistenceshownmeasurabilitytogethergoodinternalconsistencyreliabilityconstructvalidityCharacteristicsexploredmultivariatelinearregressioncomparingscoresoriginalUSstudyone-sampleT-testRESULTS:contextmeasurablereliablevalidmannerRiskfactorsincludedcaringpatientsseverespousalrelationshipsecondaryeducationInfluencepalpable-AsiansworriesfeltisolationcertainethnicityshowedCONCLUSIONS:applicableevenbearsmuchsimilarityYetmodifiedCliniciansworkingpopulationsneedsensitivepresenceinfluence©2015AuthorsInternationalJournalGeriatricPsychiatrypublishedJohnWiley&SonsLtdApplicabilityconceptMarwit-Meusercaregiver

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