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The Effects of in-Home Respite Care on the Burden of Caregivers in Taiwan

Yi‐Han Liao, Li‐Jung Elizabeth Ku, Li‐Fan Liu, Chung‐Yi Li

2022Journal of Applied Gerontology15 citationsDOI

Abstract

The utilization rate of respite care in Taiwan is low, and past studies that evaluated the effects of in-home respite care on caregiver burden are few. This two-wave panel study used Taiwan's long-term care plan 1.0 database and included 2342 care recipient-caregiver dyads who used home services to examine the impact of in-home respite care on caregiver burden. Propensity score matching was used to select 323 in-home respite service users matched with 646 nonusers as control groups (1:2 matching). The mixed effect model was applied to estimate the effects of receiving in-home respite care on caregiver burden. Results showed that compared with those of nonusers, caregiver burden scores of service users decreased significantly after receiving in-home respite care for more than 14 days (adjusted B = -0.14, SE = 0.05). The government should prioritize increasing the number of days of in-home respite care for those in need to reduce the caregiver burden.

Topics & Concepts

Respite careCaregiver burdenMedicinePropensity score matchingService (business)Government (linguistics)NursingGerontologyDementiaBusinessDiseasePathologyLinguisticsPhilosophyInternal medicineMarketingGeriatric Care and Nursing HomesPalliative Care and End-of-Life IssuesDementia and Cognitive Impairment Research
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