School of Social Work.
Waisman Center, University of Wisconsin-Madison.
Gerontologist. 2017 Aug 1;57(4):626-636. doi: 10.1093/geront/gnw008.
This study examined whether caregiving has a differential effect on the well-being of sibling caregivers relative to other caregiving groups and whether race moderates this effect.
Using the National Survey of Midlife Development in the United States, 631 family caregivers (including 61 sibling caregivers) and 4,944 noncaregivers were identified. Hierarchical regression analyses were conducted to estimate the effect of the caregiver-care recipient relationship and its interaction with race on caregivers' well-being (i.e., depressive symptoms, self-rated health, life satisfaction, and perceived control over life).
Caregivers in general reported poorer well-being than noncaregivers, but sibling caregivers were less affected by caregiving than parent or spouse caregivers. Among sibling caregivers, caregiving took a significantly greater toll on non-Hispanic White caregivers than those from minority groups with respect to depressive symptoms and life satisfaction.
The findings suggest that the experience of sibling caregivers is significantly shaped by their cultural background.
本研究旨在探讨与其他照顾群体相比,照顾兄弟姐妹对照顾者的幸福感是否有不同的影响,以及种族是否会调节这种影响。
本研究使用了美国全国中年发展调查的数据,共确定了 631 名家庭照顾者(包括 61 名兄弟姐妹照顾者)和 4944 名非照顾者。采用分层回归分析来估计照顾者-被照顾者关系及其与种族的相互作用对照顾者幸福感(即抑郁症状、自评健康、生活满意度和对生活的控制感)的影响。
一般来说,照顾者的幸福感比非照顾者差,但兄弟姐妹照顾者受到的影响比父母或配偶照顾者小。在兄弟姐妹照顾者中,与少数民族群体相比,非西班牙裔白种人照顾者的抑郁症状和生活满意度受到照顾的影响更大。
研究结果表明,兄弟姐妹照顾者的体验受到其文化背景的显著影响。