8 Out Of 10 People Who Care For A Relative Suffer From Anxiety And Stress, According To A Study
Main Category: Psychology / PsychiatryAlso Included In: Anxiety / Stress; Caregivers / Homecare
Article Date: 19 Jan 2010 - 1:00 PDT
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Conducted at the Department of Developmental and Educational Psychology from the University of Granada, the research reveals that the negative effects on the caregiver's physical, psychological and social development are highly associated with previous life history between caregiver and care receiver. To carry out this work, researchers applied a questionnaire to a population of 203 subjects whose only requirement was to be the informal caregiver of a dependent elderly person.
8 out of 10 people in charge of caring for a relative suffer from anxiety and stress, regardless of their socio-demographic variables. Families, and particularly daughters, assume the "informal care" of dependent elderly people in most of the cases. This follows an investigation carried out by Ruth M ª Calero Pérez and directed by professor José Mª Roa Venegas at the Department of Developmental and Educational Psychology at the University of Granada.
The work in the UGR shows that in some cases this care in the family creates inappropriate behaviour in the relationship, and that the negative effects on the physical, psychological and social caregiver are highly related to the previous life history between caregiver and care recipient, social isolation felt by the caregiver, and the feeling of loneliness in the relationship with the care recipient.
To carry out this work, the researchers applied a questionnaire to a population of 203 subjects whose only requirement was to be the informal caregiver of a dependent elderly person.
Family and institutional support
Results reveal that both positive and negative cognitive variables (thoughts and assessments) used by the caregiver have a decisive influence on how caregiver and care receiver relate to each other. These variables include family support and institutional support, and modulate the relationship between caregiver and care receiver.
In addition, cultural variables such as parenting patterns and styles of education received, have clear implications in the way of being and acting of informal carers, which will impact on the work of caring.
Researchers from the UGR intend to monitor all these variables as a first step towards government intervention in order to improve the quality of life of this group, and consider that this action "should use a psychoeducational approach and, somehow, ensure a better quality of life for dependent elderly people's carers.
The fact is that the relationship between informal caregiver and care recipient, the authors note, "it is not an innocuous relationship, but it is full of effects, sometimes harmful, for the caregiver's physical and psychological health. Effects of stress, anxiety, stress, etc., are known to affect the informal caregiver. But we believe these variables are insufficient to explain the variability that occurs in the conduct of the caretaker in his relationship with the care receiver. Therefore, it seemed interesting to us to introduce variables of a cognitive and (rather less studied) socio-cultural nature, in order to clarify that variability as far as possible."
Source: University of Granada
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Most Relative Carers Are Under Under Too Much Stress.
posted by brigitte on 19 Jan 2010 at 8:52 amThis is excellent and well targeted research. In addition it is suggesting the necessary and logical areas to follow further. I've worked professionally in this area as a social worker, assisted in research with this group for another unrelated topic, had a stint with a partner as his carer when he had a few years of significant impairment neurologically and physically (a lonely erratic stressful time with an incompliant ungrateful man with no insight) , had a mother with ongoing dementia luckily placed in a wonderful caring responsive facility.
She was stressful enough to deal with occasionally for relatives when in there. Had my brother her administrator needing counseling at one point until more of us got more involved in some visits, myself a wreck for days anticipating and after any of my infrequent visits. I saw friends undergo desperate personality changes as carers on meds to cope, carer clients needing rescue fast before they ended up in a facility, clients who were the cared for with broken hips dropped by loving daughter carers attempting personal care of a parent attempting to reject an aspect of holding them up, some carer sons so overwhelmed walking out for time out after hitting or threatening their demented but stubborn mothers, other sensible caring daughters enduring a waiting game of the disaster that would prove mothers in denial actual need for care.
Many like myself live oblivious to what caring for elderly demented relatives is like until we reach the age we and are friends are hit by it. Working as a social worker in this area gives one a snap shot that only fully means more once it is experienced personally realising that the clients were not the few extra difficult ones, but mostly all relative carers were in a highly stressful complex situation. It is very much the "relationship" factors causing a lot of the problems.
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