Kozlov Elissa, McDarby Meghan, Duberstein Paul, Carpenter Brian D
Institute for Health, Health Policy, and Aging Research, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, New Jersey.
Department of Psychological & Brain Sciences, Washington University in St. Louis, Missouri.
Gerontologist. 2021 Sep 13;61(7):1153-1163. doi: 10.1093/geront/gnaa137.
Adult children collaborate with older parents on care needs, yet later-life families are often uncertain about how to approach these conversations. Using the McMaster Model of Family Functioning as a framework, we developed a web-based tool for later-life families to enhance communication, knowledge, and problem solving around parent preferences for care.
Participants were older adult parents aged 65+ and at least one of their adult children. Families answered questions about the parent's care preferences via a web-based survey. Responses were aggregated in a tailored PDF that was distributed to each participant. Descriptive statistics were calculated to examine recruitment, retention, and satisfaction with the program. Repeated measures analyses of variance were calculated to determine preliminary efficacy of the intervention.
This study included 142 participants across 49 families (n = 49 older adult parents, n = 93 adult children). Of them, 75.4% completed all three phases of the study while 18.3% completed two phases and 6.3% completed only one phase. Seventy-four percent of participants reported being satisfied or very satisfied with the intervention. At baseline, most families were modestly incongruent in their ratings of future care preferences. Participants reported increased conversations about care across the course of the study (F(1.71,179.32) = 42.18, p < .001).
This study demonstrated that a web-based intervention to enhance intergenerational communication is feasible, acceptable, and has preliminary efficacy to improve intergenerational communication. Despite recruitment challenges, similarly designed web-based resources may improve accessibility and scalability of intergenerational communication-enhancing interventions.
成年子女会就父母的照料需求与年迈的父母进行协作,但老年家庭往往不确定该如何展开此类对话。我们以麦克马斯特家庭功能模型为框架,为老年家庭开发了一款基于网络的工具,以加强围绕父母照料偏好的沟通、知识交流及问题解决。
参与者为65岁及以上的老年父母及其至少一名成年子女。家庭成员通过基于网络的调查回答有关父母照料偏好的问题。答案汇总在一份定制的PDF文件中,并分发给每位参与者。计算描述性统计数据以检验项目的招募、留存情况及满意度。计算重复测量方差分析以确定干预措施的初步效果。
本研究纳入了49个家庭的142名参与者(49名老年父母,93名成年子女)。其中,75.4%的人完成了研究的所有三个阶段,18.3%的人完成了两个阶段,6.3%的人仅完成了一个阶段。74%的参与者表示对干预措施感到满意或非常满意。在基线时,大多数家庭对未来照料偏好的评分存在一定程度的不一致。参与者报告称,在研究过程中有关照料的对话有所增加(F(1.71,179.32) = 42.18,p < .001)。
本研究表明,基于网络的增强代际沟通的干预措施是可行的、可接受的,并且在改善代际沟通方面具有初步效果。尽管存在招募方面的挑战,但类似设计的基于网络的资源可能会提高增强代际沟通干预措施的可及性和可扩展性。