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Caregiving for older people living with chronic pain: analysis of the English longitudinal study of ageing and health survey for England

Caregiving for older people living with chronic pain: analysis of the English longitudinal study of ageing and health survey for England
Caregiving for older people living with chronic pain: analysis of the English longitudinal study of ageing and health survey for England
Background: chronic pain is a disabling condition. Many people with chronic pain seek informal support for everyday activities of daily living (ADL). However, there remains uncertainty on the type of people with chronic pain who access this support, what types of support they need and who provides such support. The purpose of this analysis was to answer these uncertainties.

Methods: data from the Health Survey for England (HSE) and English Longitudinal Study of Ageing (ELSA) were accessed. People who reported chronic pain (moderate or above for minimum of 12 months) were identified. From these cohorts, we determined if individuals self-reported receiving informal care. Data on caregiver profiles and caregiving activities were reported through descriptive statistics. Logistic regression analyses were performed to compare health status outcomes between people with pain who received and who did not receive informal care.

Results: 2178 people with chronic pain from the ELSA cohort and 571 from the HSE cohort were analysed. People who received care were frequently female, older aged with several medical morbidities including musculoskeletal diseases such as arthritis. People with chronic pain received informal care for several diverse tasks. Most frequently these related to instrumental activities of daily living (IADL) such as shopping and housework. They were most frequently provided by partners or their children. Although they reported greater disability and symptoms (p < 0.001), people who received care did not report differences in health status, loneliness or wellbeing (p = 0.27; p = 0.46).

Conclusions: whilst it may be possible to characterise people living in chronic pain who receive informal care, there is some uncertainty on the impact of informal caregiving on their health and wellbeing. Consideration should now be made on how best to support both care recipients and informal caregivers, to ensure their health and quality of life is promoted whilst living with chronic pain.
2049-4637
Smith, Toby
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Mansfield, Michael
ea66758a-4066-4e6c-bc30-e1beee76ff00
Hanson, Sarah
df3791ba-32bf-4a5a-afc3-96380731e8c6
Welsh, Allie
c06b951f-928b-4cfb-b7ec-ef691c1b679e
Khoury, Reema
3fb7fa1e-55da-4eac-9c97-6a7d4339d038
Clark, Allan
89b9f8d8-4b44-478e-86fe-245723d4df04
Dures, Emma
04f3cb22-f178-4884-9028-3451413fbaff
Adams, Jo
6e38b8bb-9467-4585-86e4-14062b02bcba
Smith, Toby
587ecacb-63ca-4cd5-8341-b32ae7734522
Mansfield, Michael
ea66758a-4066-4e6c-bc30-e1beee76ff00
Hanson, Sarah
df3791ba-32bf-4a5a-afc3-96380731e8c6
Welsh, Allie
c06b951f-928b-4cfb-b7ec-ef691c1b679e
Khoury, Reema
3fb7fa1e-55da-4eac-9c97-6a7d4339d038
Clark, Allan
89b9f8d8-4b44-478e-86fe-245723d4df04
Dures, Emma
04f3cb22-f178-4884-9028-3451413fbaff
Adams, Jo
6e38b8bb-9467-4585-86e4-14062b02bcba

Smith, Toby, Mansfield, Michael, Hanson, Sarah, Welsh, Allie, Khoury, Reema, Clark, Allan, Dures, Emma and Adams, Jo (2022) Caregiving for older people living with chronic pain: analysis of the English longitudinal study of ageing and health survey for England. British Journal of Pain. (doi:10.1177/2049463722114425).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: chronic pain is a disabling condition. Many people with chronic pain seek informal support for everyday activities of daily living (ADL). However, there remains uncertainty on the type of people with chronic pain who access this support, what types of support they need and who provides such support. The purpose of this analysis was to answer these uncertainties.

Methods: data from the Health Survey for England (HSE) and English Longitudinal Study of Ageing (ELSA) were accessed. People who reported chronic pain (moderate or above for minimum of 12 months) were identified. From these cohorts, we determined if individuals self-reported receiving informal care. Data on caregiver profiles and caregiving activities were reported through descriptive statistics. Logistic regression analyses were performed to compare health status outcomes between people with pain who received and who did not receive informal care.

Results: 2178 people with chronic pain from the ELSA cohort and 571 from the HSE cohort were analysed. People who received care were frequently female, older aged with several medical morbidities including musculoskeletal diseases such as arthritis. People with chronic pain received informal care for several diverse tasks. Most frequently these related to instrumental activities of daily living (IADL) such as shopping and housework. They were most frequently provided by partners or their children. Although they reported greater disability and symptoms (p < 0.001), people who received care did not report differences in health status, loneliness or wellbeing (p = 0.27; p = 0.46).

Conclusions: whilst it may be possible to characterise people living in chronic pain who receive informal care, there is some uncertainty on the impact of informal caregiving on their health and wellbeing. Consideration should now be made on how best to support both care recipients and informal caregivers, to ensure their health and quality of life is promoted whilst living with chronic pain.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 22 November 2022
e-pub ahead of print date: 6 December 2022

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 473691
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/473691
ISSN: 2049-4637
PURE UUID: fc0effaa-7e60-4458-ac27-1b8d096027f2
ORCID for Jo Adams: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-1765-7060

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Date deposited: 27 Jan 2023 17:49
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 02:42

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Contributors

Author: Toby Smith
Author: Michael Mansfield
Author: Sarah Hanson
Author: Allie Welsh
Author: Reema Khoury
Author: Allan Clark
Author: Emma Dures
Author: Jo Adams ORCID iD

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