Available online 4 May 2022, 151590
Highlights•This scoping review identified 29 nursing studies on the caregivers of people with PD during the 10-year period.
•Eighteen of the 29 studies were conducted by interdisciplinary teams, and various research designs were utilized.
•Caregiver burden/strain were the most studied variable followed by caregivers' needs/preferences, coping, advanced PD/palliative care, and decision-making related PD caregiving.
•This is a need to develop evidence-based, multicomponent interventions to improve caregiver quality of life and better health outcomes.
AbstractThe purpose of this scoping review was to assess the state of empirical research studies related to caregivers of people with Parkinson's Disease (PD) conducted by nurse scientists and their research teams during the 10-year period. A total of 29 studies were included in this review. Twenty-two studies (75.8%) were first authored by a nurse scientist. Eighteen studies (62%) were conducted by interdisciplinary teams. Caregiver burden/strain were the most studied variables (n = 12). Other variables were studied in less than five studies, including caregivers' needs/preferences, coping, caregiver support or support group, decision-making related PD caregiving, and interventions. Various research designs (e.g., qualitative, quantitative, and mixed methods) were utilized to answer the research questions in the included studies. Lack of the nursing intervention studies in PD caregiving suggests a need to develop evidence-based, multicomponent interventions to improve caregiver quality of life and better health outcomes to help caregivers provide caregiving for people with PD.
KeywordsParkinson's disease
Nursing research
Caregivers
Scoping review
© 2022 Published by Elsevier Inc.
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