Karen Lyons is convinced that older adults with chronic illness and their family caregivers can enjoy harmony and better health. All they have to do is get on the same page.
鈥淚鈥檓 a psychologist, so I鈥檓 very interested in the implications when people do or don鈥檛 see things similarly,鈥 says Lyons, a professor at the Connell School of Nursing (CSON). Lyons has devoted much of her professional life in the past two decades to studying the unique relationship between 鈥渃are partners,鈥 which is her term for an adult with a chronic or life-limiting illness and his or her family caregiver, usually a spouse. Her research has shown repeatedly that when both people in such a pair don鈥檛 see things the same way鈥攊f they disagree over how much pain or fatigue the patient feels, or how much effort a caregiver is putting in to managing doctors鈥 appointments, for example鈥攂oth are likely to experience discord and worsened health.
Lyons broke with convention to study this phenomenon. While caregiving researchers have long focused on the health of the patient or the caregiver, she studies the two as a single entity, which she calls a 鈥渇amily care dyad.鈥 鈥淚f you prioritize either the patient鈥檚 or the caregiver鈥檚 health, I really believe you miss the boat,鈥 says the native of Dublin, Ireland, who arrived at CSON in 2018 from Oregon Health & Science University (OHSU), where she was an associate professor. 鈥淏ecause you could have one care partner who鈥檚 doing great. But if they鈥檙e not both doing great, the dyad is not a success.鈥
Lyons is the first theorist at CSON since Sr. Callista Roy retired in 2017. 鈥淭he Connell School has always valued theory鈥攊t鈥檚 part of the legacy and history of the school, and that was very important to me when I interviewed,鈥 says Lyons. 鈥淚 believe that theory is kind of like our handrail when we do research. We have to hold on to something or we will never be able to tell the story.鈥
How two partners in a caregiving relationship appraise the shared experience is a foundational concept in Lyons鈥檚 theory of dyadic illness management, which she developed with her long-time collaborator, Christopher Lee, Ph.D., RN, the Barry Family/Goldman Sachs Endowed Chair in Nursing and the associate dean for research at the Connell School.