Citation
Khaw, Wan-Fei
(2017)
Quality of life of stroke survivors and their family caregivers at selected referral rehabilitation care centers.
Doctoral thesis, Universiti Putra Malaysia.
Abstract
Stroke disability results in hardship to both patients and families. Care for stroke
patients can be stressful and lead to deterioration of quality of life (QOL). Despite the
large number of stroke cases, limited local data are available on the impact of stroke
on QOL of stroke survivors and caregivers, and little is known regarding the
interdependence of QOL within the dyad. Thus, this study was developed to evaluate
overall QOL of stroke survivors and caregivers, and determined factors predicting
QOL. Dyadic analysis using Actor-Partner Interdependence Model (APIM) examined
whether stroke survivor’s and caregiver’s QOL at baseline, predicts his or her own
QOL at six months follow-up (actor effect) and partner’s QOL at follow-up (partner
effect).
This was a prospective study that involved 160 stroke survivors and 160 caregivers
recruited from neurology clinics in Hospital Kuala Lumpur and Hospital Rehabilitasi
Cheras in Klang Valley, Malaysia. The six months follow-up included 38 stroke
survivors and 38 caregivers. Socio-demographic and medical conditions, caregiving
appraisal, coping strategies and QOL were obtained from stroke survivors and
caregivers. The data were entered and analysed using the IBM SPSS for Windows,
Version 22.0 and IBM SPSS AMOS, Version 22.0. Univariate analysis was used to
clean and check the quality of data. Bivariate analysis was performed to examine the
bivariate relationships among predictor variables and stroke survivor’s and caregiver’s
QOL. Confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) was used to test dimensionality of the QOL
measure of five indicators: physical health, mental health, general health, peace, and
faith. Path analysis was used to determine the direct and indirect effects of predictors
on QOL in both stroke survivors and caregivers, and to assess the APIM model for
survivor-caregiver dyads. CFA results indicated acceptable goodness-of-fit of one-factor QOL model (χ2(12) =
42.265, p < 0.001; RMSEA = 0.063; SRMR = 0.038; CFI = 0.970), which included
five indicators: physical health, mental health, general health, peace, and faith. Stroke
survivors rated lower QOL scores compared to caregivers (M = 57.96, SD = 15.06
versus M = 45.50, SD = 16.65). Six determinants with both a direct and indirect effect
on the QOL of stroke survivors were age, duration of stroke, stroke severity, cognitive
function, physical function, and psychological distress. Seven determinants with both
a direct and indirect effect on the QOL of stroke caregivers were caregiver’s age, stroke
severity, social support, adaptive coping, maladaptive coping, caregiving burden, and
caregiving satisfaction. Actor effects between stroke survivor’s QOL (β = 0.79, p <
0.001) and caregiver’s QOL (β = 0.76, p < 0.001) at baseline and follow-up were
significant. This indicates that stroke survivor’s and caregiver’s QOL at baseline were
positively related to their own QOL at 6-months-follow-up.
These findings highlight the overall QOL score integrates all the measures of health
status of stroke survivors and their caregivers. The APIM dyadic analysis provides
insight into the relationships between stroke survivor’s and caregiver’s QOL. Thus,
this study definitively indicates the necessity for arranging interventions targeting both
stroke survivors and family caregivers, to enhance their QOL in the rehabilitation
process.
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