果冻影院

XClose

果冻影院 News

Home
Menu

Carers of people living with dementia experience discrimination

6 January 2023

Carers of people living with dementia are treated negatively by others and face discrimination, finds a new study led by 果冻影院 researchers.

Dementia carer

The research, published in BJPsych Open found that on top of known challenges experienced by carers, those who look after someone living with dementia also become stigmatised.

For the first time, researchers asked 70 family carers of people living with dementia to complete the FAMily Stigma Instrument (FAMSI), a measuring tool which considers how carers feel and what they believe people think about them. They also collected details such as the carers鈥 age and gender.

The results showed that over two thirds of carers experienced being treated negatively by others when they were with the person living with dementia (71.4%), were no longer invited to family or social events (68.6%), and were avoided in friendship circles (68.5%)

Carers also reported that people stopped going to their house (78.6%) and were more likely to treat them negatively, especially when in public (50.4%)

Dr Jem Bhatt (果冻影院 Psychology & Language Sciences) said: 鈥淔amily carers save our economy 拢13.9 billion every year, yet our efforts to understand the cost of stigma on their lives has been minimal.

鈥淏eing treated negatively by others and discriminated against, in other words experiencing stigma, is a common experience for many family carers of people living with dementia and has been identified as a global priority.

鈥淗ow we respond to this challenge will determine the well-being of carers in an ever-changing society, which relies heavily on family carers.鈥

The FAMSI also gave researchers the opportunity to ask carers about the positive aspects of their role too. Approximately half of participants said that being a carer made them feel needed (54.3%) and allowed them to form friendships with others in a similar situation (64.3%).

As the population continues to age both in the UK and worldwide, the number of people living with dementia is set to rise sharply over the next 20 years. Consequently, more people will care for a family member with the condition.

Researchers believe that measuring the impact of stigma on carers will enable them to help combat the issue in future. For example, they hope to test if the FAMSI can be used in an NHS setting as a way of identifying carers who require extra support around stigma, so that their needs can be identified and addressed.

Other potential uses of the FAMSI could be to develop interventional programmes to reduce the experience of stigma and produce training and awareness materials to help third sector staff, health professionals, friends, and other family members to make carers鈥 lives more pleasant.

Dr Bhatt said: 鈥淪tigma is a global priority because it has severe consequences for well-being. Carers in our study felt stigmatised and we need to take the negative effects of stigma for them seriously, such as being excluded and feeling isolated.

鈥淥ur paper is a step towards understanding how we can change the stigma experience for carers.鈥

The study was funded by the Alzheimer鈥檚 Society and Economic Social Research Council.

Links

Image

  • 颁谤别诲颈迟:听听on iStock

Media contact听

Poppy Danby听

E: p.danby [at] ucl.ac.uk