Effectiveness of an educational intervention to reduce the burden on home care workers and facilitating factors: A pre-post study

Nurse Educ Pract. 2022 Feb:59:103279. doi: 10.1016/j.nepr.2021.103279. Epub 2021 Dec 24.

Abstract

Aims: To determine if a training program, aimed at home care workers, for caring for the elderly and for providing their own self-care is effective for reducing workers burden in the short and long terms and to identify the associated variables that can influence burden across 12 months.

Background: An increasing number of older adults rely on home care workers as a complement to the care received from family caregivers. However, these workers do not usually have any formal training in nursing care and occasionally suffer burden.

Design: A pre- and post-intervention study with a follow-up at 12 months including 86 participants.

Methods: An 85-hour training course, which included a practical module lasting 35 h, was offered on five separate occasions between 2014 and 2017 in Barcelona (Spain). The care burden was measured according the Zarit Burden Interview and care knowledge and perceived difficulty performing care tasks were assessed. We also gathered data on the physical and psychological status of the care recipients.

Results: The educational intervention was effective after training (-7.45% p = .020) and although the initial burden on caregivers did not worsen significantly despite spending 12 months caring for people with moderate physical and psychological dependence, the decrease in the burden was not maintained over time. Associated variables that can influence the burden over 6 months were the caregivers' baseline perception of lacking knowledge and/or having no difficulty with care tasks. The variable that could influence overburden in caregivers at 12 months was becoming ill before the intervention.

Conclusions: For the first time, the effectiveness of home workers-specific training has been demonstrated: a reduction in the perceived burden was observed immediately following training completion, but this reduction was not sustained at 6/12 months. The practical interpretation is that a remedial/follow-up training course may be needed. Whether difficulty in providing care or having sufficient knowledge and having an illness influence self-care maintenance requires further verification.

Keywords: Academic training; Care giving burden; Caregivers; Elderly; Home care services.

MeSH terms

  • Aged
  • Anxiety
  • Caregivers
  • Home Care Services*
  • Humans
  • Quality of Life*
  • Self Care