Volume 8, Issue 4 pp. 339-342
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Is caring for elderly relatives with depression as stressful as caring for those with dementia? a pilot study in melbourne

Richard Yeatman

Richard Yeatman

Psychiatrist, Psychogeriatric Unit, Royal Park Hospital, Private Bag No. 3, Parkville, 3052, Australia

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Kerryn Bennetts

Kerryn Bennetts

Consulting Psychologist, University of Melbourne Department of Psychiatry, 7th Floor Clinical Sciences Building, Royal Melbourne Hospital, Parkville, 3050, Victoria, Australia

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Nicholas Allen

Nicholas Allen

Clinical Psychologist, University of Melbourne Department of Psychiatry, 7th Floor Clinical Sciences Building, Royal Melbourne Hospital, Parkville, 3050, Victoria, Australia

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David Ames

David Ames

Senior Lecturer in Psychiatry of Old Age, University of Melbourne Department of Psychiatry, 7th Floor Clinical Sciences Building, Royal Melbourne Hospital, Parkville, 3050, Victoria, Australia

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Leon Flicker

Leon Flicker

Senior Lecturer in Geriatric Medicine, University of Melbourne Department of Geriatric Medicine, National Research Institute for Gerontology and Geriatric Medicine, North West Hospital, Mount Royal Campus, Poplar Rd, Parkville, Victoria, 3052, Australia

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Wendy Waltrowicz

Wendy Waltrowicz

Research Nurse, University of Melbourne Department of Geriatric Medicine, National Research Institute for Gerontology and Geriatric Medicine, North West Hospital, Mount Royal Campus, Poplar Rd, Parkville, Victoria, 3052, Australia

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First published: April 1993
Citations: 18

Abstract

The 30-item General Health questionnaire (GHQ-30) scores of the primary carers of 31 elderly patients with depression were compared with the GHQ-30 scores of 30 primary carers of dementia sufferers. Carers of dementia sufferers who lived with their demented relative had GHQ-30 scores almost four times higher than those carers who lived apart from a dementia sufferer. There was no difference in the GHQ-30 scores of carers of depressed subjects living with or apart from their affected relative. Carers of demented patients tended on average to have higher GHQ-30 scores than carers of depressed patients, but this difference was almost entirely accounted for by the fact that more carers of demented patients lived with their ill relatives. Patient and carer age and sex and severity of patients' depression were not related to the GHQ-30 scores of their carers.

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