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Mental Health Benefits and Detriments of Caregiving Demands: A Nonlinear Association in the Canadian Longitudinal Study on Agingopen access

Authors
Bierman, AlexLee, YeonjungPenning, Margaret J.
Issue Date
Jun-2023
Publisher
SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
Keywords
depression; life satisfaction; marital status; stress process model; Canadian Longitudinal Study on Aging
Citation
JOURNAL OF AGING AND HEALTH, v.35, no.5-6, pp 392 - 404
Pages
13
Journal Title
JOURNAL OF AGING AND HEALTH
Volume
35
Number
5-6
Start Page
392
End Page
404
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/cau/handle/2019.sw.cau/61829
DOI
10.1177/08982643221125258
ISSN
0898-2643
1552-6887
Abstract
Objectives This study examines whether the association between caregiving demands and mental health is non-linear and also, whether this non-linear association is contingent on the marital status of the caregiver. Methods We analyze the data from the Canadian Longitudinal Study on Aging, applying OLS regression and quadratic interaction terms. Results A lower level of demands is salubriously associated with symptoms of depression and life satisfaction, but this association becomes deleterious at higher levels of demands. Moreover, a connection to a marital partner extends the benefits of caregiving demands and stems the adverse consequences. Discussion This research shows that acts of caregiving may not themselves be detrimental. Instead, the degree and way in which caregiving relates to mental health may vary by both the extent of the demands of the caregiving role and familial relationships in which caregivers are embedded.
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