The use of ecological momentary assessment for family caregivers of adults with chronic conditions: A systematic review

# Background Ecological momentary assessment (EMA) as a real-time data collection method can provide insight into the daily experiences of family caregivers. # Purpose This systematic review aimed to synthesize studies involving EMA completed by family caregivers of adults with chronic conditions...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Areum Han, Laurie A. Malone, Hee Yun Lee, Jiaqi Gong, Ryan Henry, Xishi Zhu, Hon K. Yuen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Open Medical Publishing 2024-03-01
Series:Health Psychology Research
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.52965/001c.93907
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1823857469978312704
author Areum Han
Laurie A. Malone
Hee Yun Lee
Jiaqi Gong
Ryan Henry
Xishi Zhu
Hon K. Yuen
author_facet Areum Han
Laurie A. Malone
Hee Yun Lee
Jiaqi Gong
Ryan Henry
Xishi Zhu
Hon K. Yuen
author_sort Areum Han
collection DOAJ
description # Background Ecological momentary assessment (EMA) as a real-time data collection method can provide insight into the daily experiences of family caregivers. # Purpose This systematic review aimed to synthesize studies involving EMA completed by family caregivers of adults with chronic conditions. # Methods A systematic search was conducted within six databases for articles published from the inception of the database through September 2023. We extracted the characteristics of the included studies and data on EMA-specific methods to determine the quality of the included studies. # Results A total of 12 studies involving EMA completed by family caregivers of adults with chronic conditions were identified, with almost all studies focused on caregivers of persons with Alzheimer's or dementia-related conditions. The average compliance rate across the included studies was 75%, below the recommended rate. In addition, most of the included studies did not collect the family caregivers' daily activities and care contexts in their responses (i.e., affect, stress, well-being, care demand, and fatigue) to the EMA prompts. # Discussion This review showed that using EMA to collect information on family caregivers of adults with chronic health conditions appeared feasible and acceptable. However, the methodology or design of using EMA to collect caregiver information in this population is still preliminary. The limited number of existing studies that have used EMA to capture the daily experiences of family caregivers does not provide key information that could improve understanding of caregivers' emotional experiences and well-being in real-life situations. We identified gaps in the literature that warrant additional EMA studies for this population.
format Article
id doaj-art-0d890c090f9149b9b0b9b3c1a49751a1
institution Kabale University
issn 2420-8124
language English
publishDate 2024-03-01
publisher Open Medical Publishing
record_format Article
series Health Psychology Research
spelling doaj-art-0d890c090f9149b9b0b9b3c1a49751a12025-02-11T20:30:37ZengOpen Medical PublishingHealth Psychology Research2420-81242024-03-0112The use of ecological momentary assessment for family caregivers of adults with chronic conditions: A systematic reviewAreum HanLaurie A. MaloneHee Yun LeeJiaqi GongRyan HenryXishi ZhuHon K. Yuen# Background Ecological momentary assessment (EMA) as a real-time data collection method can provide insight into the daily experiences of family caregivers. # Purpose This systematic review aimed to synthesize studies involving EMA completed by family caregivers of adults with chronic conditions. # Methods A systematic search was conducted within six databases for articles published from the inception of the database through September 2023. We extracted the characteristics of the included studies and data on EMA-specific methods to determine the quality of the included studies. # Results A total of 12 studies involving EMA completed by family caregivers of adults with chronic conditions were identified, with almost all studies focused on caregivers of persons with Alzheimer's or dementia-related conditions. The average compliance rate across the included studies was 75%, below the recommended rate. In addition, most of the included studies did not collect the family caregivers' daily activities and care contexts in their responses (i.e., affect, stress, well-being, care demand, and fatigue) to the EMA prompts. # Discussion This review showed that using EMA to collect information on family caregivers of adults with chronic health conditions appeared feasible and acceptable. However, the methodology or design of using EMA to collect caregiver information in this population is still preliminary. The limited number of existing studies that have used EMA to capture the daily experiences of family caregivers does not provide key information that could improve understanding of caregivers' emotional experiences and well-being in real-life situations. We identified gaps in the literature that warrant additional EMA studies for this population.https://doi.org/10.52965/001c.93907
spellingShingle Areum Han
Laurie A. Malone
Hee Yun Lee
Jiaqi Gong
Ryan Henry
Xishi Zhu
Hon K. Yuen
The use of ecological momentary assessment for family caregivers of adults with chronic conditions: A systematic review
Health Psychology Research
title The use of ecological momentary assessment for family caregivers of adults with chronic conditions: A systematic review
title_full The use of ecological momentary assessment for family caregivers of adults with chronic conditions: A systematic review
title_fullStr The use of ecological momentary assessment for family caregivers of adults with chronic conditions: A systematic review
title_full_unstemmed The use of ecological momentary assessment for family caregivers of adults with chronic conditions: A systematic review
title_short The use of ecological momentary assessment for family caregivers of adults with chronic conditions: A systematic review
title_sort use of ecological momentary assessment for family caregivers of adults with chronic conditions a systematic review
url https://doi.org/10.52965/001c.93907
work_keys_str_mv AT areumhan theuseofecologicalmomentaryassessmentforfamilycaregiversofadultswithchronicconditionsasystematicreview
AT laurieamalone theuseofecologicalmomentaryassessmentforfamilycaregiversofadultswithchronicconditionsasystematicreview
AT heeyunlee theuseofecologicalmomentaryassessmentforfamilycaregiversofadultswithchronicconditionsasystematicreview
AT jiaqigong theuseofecologicalmomentaryassessmentforfamilycaregiversofadultswithchronicconditionsasystematicreview
AT ryanhenry theuseofecologicalmomentaryassessmentforfamilycaregiversofadultswithchronicconditionsasystematicreview
AT xishizhu theuseofecologicalmomentaryassessmentforfamilycaregiversofadultswithchronicconditionsasystematicreview
AT honkyuen theuseofecologicalmomentaryassessmentforfamilycaregiversofadultswithchronicconditionsasystematicreview
AT areumhan useofecologicalmomentaryassessmentforfamilycaregiversofadultswithchronicconditionsasystematicreview
AT laurieamalone useofecologicalmomentaryassessmentforfamilycaregiversofadultswithchronicconditionsasystematicreview
AT heeyunlee useofecologicalmomentaryassessmentforfamilycaregiversofadultswithchronicconditionsasystematicreview
AT jiaqigong useofecologicalmomentaryassessmentforfamilycaregiversofadultswithchronicconditionsasystematicreview
AT ryanhenry useofecologicalmomentaryassessmentforfamilycaregiversofadultswithchronicconditionsasystematicreview
AT xishizhu useofecologicalmomentaryassessmentforfamilycaregiversofadultswithchronicconditionsasystematicreview
AT honkyuen useofecologicalmomentaryassessmentforfamilycaregiversofadultswithchronicconditionsasystematicreview