Skip to content

Caregiver Stress: Interventions to Promote Health and Wellbeing

Caregiver Stress: Interventions to Promote Health and Wellbeing

Status
Completed
Phases
NA
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT01188070
Enrollment
354
Registered
2010-08-25
Start date
2010-01-31
Completion date
2014-05-31
Last updated
2017-02-23

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Health Promotion

Keywords

Behavioral/Social, Cardiology, Clinical Laboratory Methods, Congestive Heart Failure, Heart Disease, Knowledge Dissemination, Lipids, Nursing, Health Promotion, Alzheimer's Disease/Dementia

Brief summary

More and more family members are providing care to their loved ones with prolonged and progressive illnesses. Chronic intense caregiving represents a situation of chronic stress, which takes a toll on one's mental and physical health including an increased risk for the development or worsening of heart disease. Identification of effective self-care interventions for family caregivers is warranted to improve their emotional wellbeing and minimize the harmful effects of chronic stress on the heart. This Program Project Grant aims to promote health and reduce cardiovascular risk in family caregivers (FCG) of persons with chronic illness. In two studies the investigators will test two interventions, psycho-education(ED) and physical exercise(EX), individually and in combination. The first study will target FCG of African American dementia patients; the second will focus on FCG of heart failure patients. Parallel designs, interventions and measures will create synergy as will integration of all data management and analyses within a Bio-behavioral Science and Measures Core. This Core will also provide high level guidance and interpretation of model testing resulting from analysis of the common data set. The combined de-identified data set will allow for elucidating the biological mechanisms of stress-induced cardiovascular risk, further developing the model, and stimulating future research, while the shared core support will provide substantial efficiency; neither could be achieved outside of a Program Project approach. These collective efforts will generate important data whereby future care can significantly enhance the lives of FCG and minimize their risk of cardiovascular disease, the number one cause of disability and death in the United States. We hypothesize that FCGs who receive the combined PSYCHED+EX intervention will have better psychological functioning (lower levels of depressive symptoms, anxiety, and caregiver burden and higher levels of flourishing), behavioral outcomes (improved sleep quality and greater physical function), cardiovascular risk measures (improved resting heart rate, blood pressure, heart rate recovery, oxygen consumption, lipids, glucose, and inflammatory markers), neuroendocrine function (salivary cortisol) and overall health outcomes (improved function, muscle strength, and endurance) compared to psycho-education and usual care-attention control from baseline to six months later mediated by improvements in process outcomes (lower perceived stress and higher self-efficacy).

Interventions

BEHAVIORALUsual Care

Educational materials

Educational group sessions

BEHAVIORALPsycho-education plus physical exercise

Psychoeducation intervention plus an individualized exercise program

Sponsors

National Institute of Nursing Research (NINR)
CollaboratorNIH
Emory University
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
PARALLEL
Primary purpose
SUPPORTIVE_CARE
Masking
NONE

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
21 Years to No maximum
Healthy volunteers
Yes

Inclusion criteria

* Family caregiver defined as a spouse, partner or other adult family member living in the same house or in contact with a HF patient or dementia patient in a caregiver relationship at least 4 times/week for at least one hour or more. * willing to participate * English fluency * ambulatory and physically able to engage in a structured low impact walking and upper body strength training program. * self identify as African American for the Alzheimer FCG study

Exclusion criteria

* non sedentary (defined as engaging in \> 30 minutes of moderately strenuous exercise 3 times or more a week) * medical or physical condition that would preclude participation in the exercise component of the study (e.g., severe arthritis or mobility problems, uncontrolled hypertension or diabetes, renal insufficiency, or a history of angina with activity) * current psychiatric comorbidity (alcohol or drug abuse/dependence, bipolar or psychotic disorder, suicidal ideation detected on the MINI screening tool) * current smoker * cognitive problems (BLESSED screen) * ischemic changes or inappropriate BP changes on BL exercise (modified Balke) treadmill test * on corticosteroids * experiencing an acute inflammation at time of baseline or follow-up testing (this will result in rescheduling of testing if no other

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Emotional outcomesBaseline and 6 monthsDepression, Anxiety, Caregiver Burden, Flourishing
Behavioral OutcomesBaseline and 6 monthsPhysical Activity, Sleep Quality
Health StatusBaseline and 6 monthsFunction, Muscle strength, endurance
NeuroendocrineFrame Baseline and 6 monthsSalivary Cortisol
Cardiovascular Risk OutcomesBaseline and 6 monthsBiochemical Markers (Inflammation Coagulation Insulin Resistance) Cardiovascular Reactivity & Risk

Countries

United States

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Mar 6, 2026