Abstract

[LANGUAGE= "English"] INTRODUCTION: Polysubstance abuse can result in significant adverse effects on an individual’s physical, mental, and social health, affecting families and leading to increased stress, anxiety, depression, and financial difficulties. This study evaluated the effect of a psychoeducational program to enhance expressed emotion (EE) and reduce the burden of care among family caregivers of patients with polysubstance abuse.

METHODS: The study was conducted at the addiction clinic in the El Abasia Psychiatric and Mental Health Hospital, in Egypt using a quasi-experimental design that involved a pre-test and a post-test. The study involved 62 caregivers of polysubstance abuse patients, and data were collected in the period from June to December 2022. The data were collected by online survey which includes socio-demographic data assessment questionnaire, caregivers’ knowledge about polysubstance abuse form, patterns of EE scale, and Zarit Burden Interview scale.

RESULTS: The ages of 72.60% of family caregivers ranged from 30 to 40 years. The total knowledge score was 54.6% pre-program implementation versus 87.2% post-program. Furthermore, 70.7% of caregivers had high EE pre-program versus 26.4% post-program. In addition, 78.4% of caregivers reported high burden pre-program implementation versus 32.8% post-pro-gram. The scores related to caregivers’ EEs and burden following the implementation of a psycho-educational program were significantly improved, (p<0.001). The total EE and total burden scores of caregivers were more significantly positively correlated pre-program than post-program implementation (p<0.001).

DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSION: Implementing the psycho-educational intervention had resulted in a positive statistically significant impact on improving the EE of family caregivers and decreasing the burden of patient care.

Alternate abstract:

INTRODUCTION: Polysubstance abuse can result in significant adverse effects on an individual’s physical, mental, and social health, affecting families and leading to increased stress, anxiety, depression, and financial difficulties. This study evaluated the effect of a psychoeducational program to enhance expressed emotion (EE) and reduce the burden of care among family caregivers of patients with polysubstance abuse.

METHODS: The study was conducted at the addiction clinic in the El Abasia Psychiatric and Mental Health Hospital, in Egypt using a quasi-experimental design that involved a pre-test and a post-test. The study involved 62 caregivers of polysubstance abuse patients, and data were collected in the period from June to December 2022. The data were collected by online survey which includes socio-demographic data assessment questionnaire, caregivers’ knowledge about polysubstance abuse form, patterns of EE scale, and Zarit Burden Interview scale.

RESULTS: The ages of 72.60% of family caregivers ranged from 30 to 40 years. The total knowledge score was 54.6% pre-program implementation versus 87.2% post-program. Furthermore, 70.7% of caregivers had high EE pre-program versus 26.4% post-program. In addition, 78.4% of caregivers reported high burden pre-program implementation versus 32.8% post-pro-gram. The scores related to caregivers’ EEs and burden following the implementation of a psycho-educational program were significantly improved, (p<0.001). The total EE and total burden scores of caregivers were more significantly positively correlated pre-program than post-program implementation (p<0.001).

DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSION: Implementing the psycho-educational intervention had resulted in a positive statistically significant impact on improving the EE of family caregivers and decreasing the burden of patient care.

Details

Title
Psycho-educational program to enhance expressed emotion and reduce burden of care among family caregivers of patients with polysubstance abuse
Author
Shimaa Saied Adam Mohamed  VIAFID ORCID Logo  ; Amal Gamal Elsayed Awad  VIAFID ORCID Logo  ; Hanaa Sayed Ewise  VIAFID ORCID Logo  ; Samah Abdulwahed Ahmed Ali  VIAFID ORCID Logo 
Pages
450-457
Section
RESEARCH ARTICLE
Publication year
2024
Publication date
2024
Publisher
Kare Publishing
ISSN
13093568
e-ISSN
2149374X
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
3170287024
Copyright
© 2024. This work is published under https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ (the “License”). Notwithstanding the ProQuest Terms and Conditions, you may use this content in accordance with the terms of the License.