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Factors Influencing Wellbeing in Carers of People with Huntington’s Disease.

Research output: ThesisDoctoral Thesis

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Factors Influencing Wellbeing in Carers of People with Huntington’s Disease. / Ross, Hannah.
Lancaster University, 2025. 266 p.

Research output: ThesisDoctoral Thesis

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Ross H. Factors Influencing Wellbeing in Carers of People with Huntington’s Disease.. Lancaster University, 2025. 266 p. doi: 10.17635/lancaster/thesis/2636

Author

Ross, Hannah. / Factors Influencing Wellbeing in Carers of People with Huntington’s Disease.. Lancaster University, 2025. 266 p.

Bibtex

@phdthesis{0fcb0683c6554c1f8de7339d59e26886,
title = "Factors Influencing Wellbeing in Carers of People with Huntington{\textquoteright}s Disease.",
abstract = "This thesis explores factors associated with wellbeing in carers of people with Huntington{\textquoteright}s disease (HD). Section one presents a systematic literature review examining factors associated with psychological outcomes in HD carers. Six databases were searched (CINAHL, EMBASE, MEDLINE, PsycINFO, Scopus, and Web of Science), resulting in 24 included papers. Caring for someone with more advanced HD, greater functional impairment, and more severe behavioural/psychological difficulties was associated with higher carer burden and carer depression. Indicators of providing higher amounts of care were associated with higher carer burden and lower quality of life. Evidence for other relationships was inconclusive. The findings additionally highlighted the need for further theoretically informed research.Section two describes a cross-sectional quantitative study examining whether satisfaction with family relationships and friendships predicted positive wellbeing and negative feelings in HD carers. It further examined whether these relationship satisfaction variables moderated the relationships between person with HD functional capacity and behavioural/psychological difficulties and carer wellbeing outcomes. The study analysed secondary data from 880 people with HD and their carers participating in Enroll-HD, an international observational cohort study. Hierarchical multiple regression models found that satisfaction with family relationships and friendships were independent predictors of higher positive wellbeing and lower negative feelings in HD carers, after controlling for carer demographics, caring intensity, and person with HD motor and cognitive difficulties, functional capacity, and behavioural/psychological difficulties. These findings were consistent across sub-group analyses for spousal carers, adults caring for their parent, and main carers. However, moderation analyses were non-significant. The importance of relationship satisfaction for wellbeing in HD carers suggests interventions to support this group would benefit from considering both individual and systemic factors.Section three presents a critical appraisal of these projects, including a discussion of their strengths, limitations, and personal reflections on the research process.",
keywords = "Huntington's disease, Care-givers, Psychological Wellbeing, Quality of Life",
author = "Hannah Ross",
year = "2025",
month = jan,
day = "31",
doi = "10.17635/lancaster/thesis/2636",
language = "English",
publisher = "Lancaster University",
school = "Lancaster University",

}

RIS

TY - BOOK

T1 - Factors Influencing Wellbeing in Carers of People with Huntington’s Disease.

AU - Ross, Hannah

PY - 2025/1/31

Y1 - 2025/1/31

N2 - This thesis explores factors associated with wellbeing in carers of people with Huntington’s disease (HD). Section one presents a systematic literature review examining factors associated with psychological outcomes in HD carers. Six databases were searched (CINAHL, EMBASE, MEDLINE, PsycINFO, Scopus, and Web of Science), resulting in 24 included papers. Caring for someone with more advanced HD, greater functional impairment, and more severe behavioural/psychological difficulties was associated with higher carer burden and carer depression. Indicators of providing higher amounts of care were associated with higher carer burden and lower quality of life. Evidence for other relationships was inconclusive. The findings additionally highlighted the need for further theoretically informed research.Section two describes a cross-sectional quantitative study examining whether satisfaction with family relationships and friendships predicted positive wellbeing and negative feelings in HD carers. It further examined whether these relationship satisfaction variables moderated the relationships between person with HD functional capacity and behavioural/psychological difficulties and carer wellbeing outcomes. The study analysed secondary data from 880 people with HD and their carers participating in Enroll-HD, an international observational cohort study. Hierarchical multiple regression models found that satisfaction with family relationships and friendships were independent predictors of higher positive wellbeing and lower negative feelings in HD carers, after controlling for carer demographics, caring intensity, and person with HD motor and cognitive difficulties, functional capacity, and behavioural/psychological difficulties. These findings were consistent across sub-group analyses for spousal carers, adults caring for their parent, and main carers. However, moderation analyses were non-significant. The importance of relationship satisfaction for wellbeing in HD carers suggests interventions to support this group would benefit from considering both individual and systemic factors.Section three presents a critical appraisal of these projects, including a discussion of their strengths, limitations, and personal reflections on the research process.

AB - This thesis explores factors associated with wellbeing in carers of people with Huntington’s disease (HD). Section one presents a systematic literature review examining factors associated with psychological outcomes in HD carers. Six databases were searched (CINAHL, EMBASE, MEDLINE, PsycINFO, Scopus, and Web of Science), resulting in 24 included papers. Caring for someone with more advanced HD, greater functional impairment, and more severe behavioural/psychological difficulties was associated with higher carer burden and carer depression. Indicators of providing higher amounts of care were associated with higher carer burden and lower quality of life. Evidence for other relationships was inconclusive. The findings additionally highlighted the need for further theoretically informed research.Section two describes a cross-sectional quantitative study examining whether satisfaction with family relationships and friendships predicted positive wellbeing and negative feelings in HD carers. It further examined whether these relationship satisfaction variables moderated the relationships between person with HD functional capacity and behavioural/psychological difficulties and carer wellbeing outcomes. The study analysed secondary data from 880 people with HD and their carers participating in Enroll-HD, an international observational cohort study. Hierarchical multiple regression models found that satisfaction with family relationships and friendships were independent predictors of higher positive wellbeing and lower negative feelings in HD carers, after controlling for carer demographics, caring intensity, and person with HD motor and cognitive difficulties, functional capacity, and behavioural/psychological difficulties. These findings were consistent across sub-group analyses for spousal carers, adults caring for their parent, and main carers. However, moderation analyses were non-significant. The importance of relationship satisfaction for wellbeing in HD carers suggests interventions to support this group would benefit from considering both individual and systemic factors.Section three presents a critical appraisal of these projects, including a discussion of their strengths, limitations, and personal reflections on the research process.

KW - Huntington's disease

KW - Care-givers

KW - Psychological Wellbeing

KW - Quality of Life

U2 - 10.17635/lancaster/thesis/2636

DO - 10.17635/lancaster/thesis/2636

M3 - Doctoral Thesis

PB - Lancaster University

ER -