No Caregiver Left Behind: Addressing Accessibility and Sustainability of an ACT Intervention for Family Caregivers of People with Neurodevelopmental Disabilities
Aperçu du projet
Caring for a family member with a neurodevelopmental disability (NDD) can be challenging, often leading to high levels of anxiety and depression. To address this, our team of clinicians, scientists, caregivers, and trainees co-developed Caring for the Caregiver Acceptance and Commitment Training (CC-ACT), a group-based intervention. This intervention, co-led by trained caregivers and clinicians, helps caregivers develop skills to cope and improve their well-being. To date, we have successfully trained 80 caregivers and 100 clinicians from across Canada and shown how the program is helping families.
However, challenges remain to scaling up the intervention. Many under-served caregivers face barriers to accessing the intervention, including systemic inequities, language differences, and stigma. Additionally, long-term sustainability requires institutional support, such as funding and policy integration. To address these challenges, we will work with local teams to adapt the intervention to meet the needs of diverse, under-served caregivers (i.e., Black caregivers, father’s, neurodivergent caregivers, Francophone caregivers). We will also establish regional and national groups to support sustainable scale-up by facilitating regional collaborations, developing policy recommendations, enhancing a national training model, and supporting advocacy. This project will improve accessibility of CC-ACT, an evidence-based caregiver support intervention, and support its scale-up across Canada.
Chef d'équipe
Johanna Lake , Center for Addiction and Mental Health and University Health Network
Membres de l'équipe
Avra Selick, CAMH
Kenneth Fung, University Health Network
Yona Lunksy, Center for Addiction and Mental Health
Lee Steel, Centre for Addiction and Mental Health
Jodie Siu, BC Centrer for Ability/CAMH
Kendra Thomson, Brock University
Jonathan Weiss, York University
Claire de Oliveira, Centre for Addiction and Mental Health
Kayla Lauzon, Cdn Centre for Caregiving Excellence
Partenaire et Donateurs
Kids Brain Health Network
The Azrieli Foundation
BC Centre for Ability
Siblings Canada