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Benefits of a Self-Management Program for the Couple Living With Parkinson’s Disease: A Pilot Study

Karen S. Lyons, Alex Zajack, Melissa A. Greer, Holly Chaimov, Nathan F. Dieckmann, Julie H. Carter

2020Journal of Applied Gerontology29 citationsDOI

Abstract

The goal of this pilot study was to explore health benefits for couples participating together in an existing community-based self-management workshop for Parkinson’s disease (PD). A quasi-experimental two-wave design explored the effects of the Strive to Thrive program in comparison to a wait-list control condition. Preliminary data ( n = 39 couples) showed that spouses in the intervention group had greater engagement in mental relaxation techniques at 7 weeks than those in the control condition (large effect size). Small effects were observed for increases in aerobic activity and mental relaxation for the adult with PD, increases in strength-based activities and self-efficacy for spouses, declines in depressive symptoms for spouses, and decreases in protective buffering for both adults with PD and spouses. The program showed potential for existing community-based programs to benefit couples living with chronic illness.

Topics & Concepts

Parkinson's diseasePsychologyGerontologySelf-managementIntervention (counseling)Mental healthRelaxation (psychology)Clinical psychologyPhysical therapyMedicineDiseasePsychiatrySocial psychologyMachine learningComputer sciencePathologyParkinson's Disease Mechanisms and TreatmentsFamily and Disability Support Research
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