ConfidenceResearch, explained

Short Videos Boosted Dementia Caregivers' Self-Care

Jillian SchaferReviewed by Jillian Schafer··4 min read
Self-care capacity of informal caregivers of older adults with dementia: quasi-experimental study
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The short version

In a small before-and-after study of 17 dementia caregivers, four short videos built on the four sources of self-efficacy raised self-care scores from about 95 to 102, a statistically significant gain. Building caregivers' belief that they can cope appeared to improve how well they cared for themselves.

Caring for a loved one with dementia is one of the most demanding jobs there is, and the person doing it often comes last on their own list. Could a simple, confidence-building program help caregivers take better care of themselves? A study tested a short video series built around one powerful idea, believing in your own ability to cope, and saw caregivers' self-care measurably improve.

What the researchers wanted to know

The researchers set out to assess whether an educational intervention grounded in self-efficacy, the belief in your own ability to handle a challenge, could increase the self-care capacity of informal caregivers of older adults with dementia. Informal caregivers are typically family members, not paid professionals, and they shoulder enormous demands, often around the clock.

The practical question was whether strengthening their sense of I can do this would translate into a greater capacity to care for themselves. It is a meaningful question, because a caregiver who neglects their own health cannot sustainably care for anyone else.

How they studied it

This was a quasi-experimental study with a before-and-after design and no control group. Seventeen informal caregivers of older adults with dementia took part. The program ran in three stages.

First, a pre-intervention stage gathered information about the caregivers and measured their burden, self-care capacity, and perceived self-efficacy. Second came the intervention itself: four videos the researcher produced, each based on one of the four sources of self-efficacy beliefs described in Bandura's Social Cognitive Theory. Third, a post-intervention stage measured self-care capacity again to see what had changed.

What they found

Caregivers' self-care capacity went up. On average, scores rose from 95.00 before the intervention to 102.11 afterward, and that improvement was statistically significant, with a p-value of 0.029. In plain terms, that means the increase is unlikely to be a fluke of chance.

Building caregivers' belief in their own ability to cope is not selfish; in this study it went hand in hand with taking better care of themselves.

The researchers concluded that the self-efficacy-based educational intervention was effective in increasing self-care capacity for informal caregivers of older adults with dementia. That is a hopeful result, especially given how little the intervention asked of already-stretched caregivers, just four short videos.

What this means for you

If you are caring for someone with dementia, or any loved one with heavy needs, this research carries a gentle but important message: building your belief in your own ability to cope is not selfish, it may be exactly what helps you keep going.

Bandura's theory points to concrete ways confidence grows, mastering small tasks, seeing others like you succeed, receiving encouragement, and managing your own stress signals. You can put these to work: break caregiving challenges into small wins you can actually achieve, connect with other caregivers who understand what you are facing, accept encouragement instead of brushing it off, and notice when your body needs rest. Feeling more capable makes it easier to do the self-care that keeps you healthy enough to keep caring for someone else, which is ultimately good for both of you.

The honest caveats

This study deserves a cautious read. It included just 17 caregivers and, importantly, had no control group, so there was no comparison group of caregivers who did not watch the videos. Without that comparison, we cannot be certain the improvement was caused by the intervention rather than by other factors, and the small size limits how far the findings generalize. The results are promising and point in an encouraging direction, but they are best seen as an early signal that deserves larger, controlled research. Caregiving is genuinely hard, and if you are feeling overwhelmed, please reach out, to other caregivers, community resources, or a health professional, because support beyond a self-care program often makes a real difference.

Key takeaways
  • After watching four short videos built on self-efficacy theory, dementia caregivers' self-care scores rose significantly.
  • Confidence tends to grow through small wins, role models, encouragement, and managing stress, all of which caregivers can apply.
  • The study was small with no comparison group, so treat it as an encouraging early signal rather than proof.

Frequently asked questions

What is self-efficacy, and how was it used?

Self-efficacy is the belief in your own ability to handle a challenge. The intervention used four videos, each based on one of the four sources of self-efficacy beliefs described in Bandura's Social Cognitive Theory, to try to increase informal caregivers' capacity to care for themselves.

How strong is this evidence?

It is an early signal. The study included just 17 caregivers and had no control group, so there was no comparison of caregivers who did not watch the videos. Without that comparison, we cannot be certain the improvement was caused by the intervention rather than by other factors, and the small size limits how far it generalizes.

What practical steps does the article suggest for caregivers?

Drawing on Bandura's theory, it suggests breaking caregiving challenges into small wins you can actually achieve, connecting with other caregivers who understand what you face, accepting encouragement instead of brushing it off, and noticing when your body needs rest. It adds that if you feel overwhelmed, support beyond a self-care program often makes a real difference.

The original study

Self-care capacity of informal caregivers of older adults with dementia: quasi-experimental study

Read the full study

This is a plain-English summary reviewed by Jillian Schafer. It is educational, not medical advice.

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