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Elder Mistreatment Within Stroke Family Caregiving.

Carina KatigbakWesley R BrowningSean SavitzCarolyn E Z Pickering
Published in: Journal of applied gerontology : the official journal of the Southern Gerontological Society (2024)
This secondary data analysis sought to identify characteristics associated with mistreatment among chronic stroke survivors who transition to dementia. We examined baseline data from a multi-time series survey study ( n = 453; where caregivers of those with stroke n = 107, and those without stroke, n = 346 ) on caregiving experiences influencing dementia family caregivers' abusive or neglectful behaviors. Inferential statistical analysis indicated that baseline mistreatment rates were similar across stroke and non-stroke subgroups, though this finding was not significant. Caregiver depression was significantly associated with mistreatment. Multi-morbidity, prescription medication use, and limited mobility were more common among stroke survivors. Stroke-related complications may impose a greater burden of care upon family caregivers whose care recipients also have dementia. Determining timepoints of heightened mistreatment risk for stroke survivors may significantly impact long-term trajectories of stroke management to screen and identify those who may benefit from added support and intervention.
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