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The Gerontologist 45:177-185 (2005)
© 2005 The Gerontological Society of America

Early Community-Based Service Utilization and Its Effects on Institutionalization in Dementia Caregiving

Joseph E. Gaugler, PhD1,, Robert L. Kane, MD2, Rosalie A. Kane, PhD2 and Robert Newcomer, PhD3

Correspondence: Address correspondence to Joseph E. Gaugler, PhD, Assistant Professor, The College of Medicine, Department of Behavioral Science, 110 College of Medicine Office Building, Lexington, KY 40536-0086. E-mail: jgaugle{at}uky.edu

Purpose: The present study attempts to determine whether utilizing community-based long-term-care services early in the dementia caregiving career delays time to nursing home placement (adjusting for severity of dementia). Design and Methods: With a reliance on data from 4,761 dementia caregivers recruited from eight catchment areas in the United States and followed over a 3-year period, a Cox proportional hazards model was conducted that considered key components of the stress process (e.g., context of care, primary objective and subjective stressors, and resources), duration, and community-based long-term-care use. Results: An analysis of interaction terms in the Cox regression model found that those individuals who utilized in-home help services earlier in their dementia caregiving careers were more likely to delay institutionalization. Implications: The findings suggest the practical importance and cost-effectiveness implications of early community-based service use, and they emphasize the role of timing when one is conceptualizing the proliferation of stress in the dementia caregiving career.

Key Words: Community-based long-term-care use • Dementia • Caregiving




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