Frontiers in Public Health (Feb 2024)

Conceptualizing care partners' burden, stress, and support for reintegrating Veterans: a mixed methods study

  • Nicholas A. Rattray,
  • Nicholas A. Rattray,
  • Nicholas A. Rattray,
  • Mindy Flanagan,
  • Allison Mann,
  • Allison Mann,
  • Leah Danson,
  • Leah Danson,
  • Ai-Nghia Do,
  • Diana Natividad,
  • Katrina Spontak,
  • Katrina Spontak,
  • Gala True,
  • Gala True

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpubh.2023.1295627
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11

Abstract

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BackgroundPeople who support Veterans as they transition from their military service into civilian life may be at an increased risk of psychological distress. Existing studies focus primarily on paid family caregivers, but few studies include spouses and informal non-family “care partners.” We sought to identify key challenges faced by care partners of Veterans with invisible injuries.MethodsSemi-structured interviews were conducted with 36 individuals involved in supporting a recently separated US military Veteran enrolled in a 2-year longitudinal study. CPs completed validated measures on perceived stress, caregiving burden, quality of their relationship, life satisfaction, and flourishing. Independent t-tests were used to compare cases in these groups on caregiving burden, quality of their relationship, life satisfaction, and flourishing. Care partners were categorized as reporting high and low levels of stress. Exemplar cases were used to demonstrate divergences in the experiences of CPs with different levels of stress over time.ResultsCare partners reported shifts in self-perception that occurred from supporting a Veteran, emphasizing how they helped Veterans navigate health systems and the processes of disclosing health and personal information in civilian contexts. Exemplar cases with high and low burdens demonstrated divergent experiences in self-perception, managing multi-faceted strain, and coping with stress over time. Case studies of specific care partners illustrate how multi-faceted strain shifted over time and is affected by additional burdens from childcare, financial responsibilities, or lack of education on mental health issues.ConclusionsFindings suggest the unique needs of individuals who support military Veterans with invisible injuries, highlighting variations and diachronic elements of caregiving. This sample is younger than the typical caregiver sample with implications for how best to support unpaid care partners caring for Veterans in the early to mid-period of their use of VA and civilian health services.

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