Healthcare (Jan 2021)

Making the Invisible Companion of People with Dementia Visible in Economic Studies: What Can We Learn from Social Science?

  • Kim-Huong Nguyen,
  • Tracy Comans

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare9010044
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 1
p. 44

Abstract

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The dyadic perspective is important to understand the mutual influence and interdependence of both the person living with dementia and their care partner. This perspective is routinely adopted in social research programs for dementia and many dyadic interventions have been developed. However, economic evaluation and modelling to date has often failed to incorporate caregivers’ perspectives, and their respective costs and outcomes while giving care for the person with dementia. On the occasions that this has been done, caregivers were represented as “informal costs” associated with dementia. This limited perspective cannot incorporate two-way interactions of the dyad in economic evaluations of dementia programs. This paper provides an overview of the possible interactions between people living with dementia and care partners as discovered in social science literature in the past 20 years. We demonstrate the strength of the relationships and discuss strategies for incorporating the dyadic perspective in economic evaluations of dementia programs in the future.

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