Predictors of Family Caregivers’ Depressive- and Prolonged-Grief-Disorder-Symptom Trajectories

Fur Hsing Wen, Wen Chi Chou, Holly G. Prigerson, Wen Chi Shen, Mei Huang Hsu, Siew Tzuh Tang*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal Article peer-review

4 Scopus citations

Abstract

Objective: Depression and prolonged grief disorder (PGD) are related but distinct constructs with different risk factors and treatments. We aimed to determine commonality and differences in factors predicting membership in depressive- and PGD-symptom trajectories to highlight uniqueness of each construct to guide further care and treatments. Methods: We previously identified four shared trajectories for depressive- and PGD-symptom trajectories (endurance, transient-reaction, resilience, and prolonged-symptomatic) with unique trajectories of chronically distressed and potential recurrence for depressive and PGD symptoms, respectively. This secondary-analysis study examined pre- and postloss factors predisposing 849 bereaved caregivers of cancer patients to membership in depressive- and PGD-symptom trajectories from the integrative framework of predictors for bereavement outcomes by a multinomial logistic regression model (the “endurance” trajectory as reference). Results: Common factors predicted membership in depressive- and PGD-symptom trajectories: higher postloss personal coping capacity protected from more distressing symptom trajectories, spousal relationship with the patient predicted membership in the transient-reaction trajectory, while financial hardship and preloss depressive symptoms predicted for the resilience trajectory. Yet, accurate prognostic awareness protected caregivers from more distressing depressive-symptom trajectories only. Higher preloss subjective caregiving burden protected caregivers from the four more distressing depressive-symptom trajectories but only from the transient-reaction and resilience trajectories for PGD symptoms. Conclusion: Commonality and differences in factors predicting membership in PGD- and depressive-symptom trajectories confirm that PGD and depression are related but distinct constructs. Interventions should be tailored to caregivers’ unique risk profile for depressive- and PGD-symptom trajectories to reduce the likelihood of suffering both or individual symptom trajectories.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)476-484.e1
JournalJournal of Pain and Symptom Management
Volume63
Issue number4
DOIs
StatePublished - 04 2022

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 American Academy of Hospice and Palliative Medicine

Keywords

  • Prolonged grief disorder
  • cancer
  • construct distinctiveness
  • depressive symptoms
  • end-of-life care
  • oncology
  • predictors
  • symptom trajectories

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