Abstract
The following describes a conceptual model for dementia caregiving. The interdisciplinary model proposes that a caregiver’s confrontation with existential loss plays a determining role in the well-being of the dementia care dyad. The paper describes how existential threats can affect a caregiver’s appraisal of the care situation, and thus how a caregiver copes. Still further, it is speculated that caregiver coping (as manifested primarily through avoidance or acceptance of loss) will influence behavioral interaction within the caregiving dyad, where communication and decision making between caregiver and the person with dementia is predominantly inequitable (e.g., authoritarian) or equitable (e.g., negotiated). Lastly, it is proposed that the type of dyadic behavior is an antecedent to dyadic well-being. In terms of intervention, as the model is centered on the intrapsychic threat posed by loss, particular emphasis is on both individual and social factors that negatively influence a caregiver’s ability to integrate the emotional costs related to dementia and its care.
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