Authors
Marcia G Ory, Richard R Hoffman III, Jennifer L Yee, Sharon Tennstedt, Richard Schulz
Publication date
1999/4/1
Journal
The Gerontologist
Volume
39
Issue
2
Pages
177-186
Publisher
The Gerontological Society of America
Description
Analyzing data from more than 1,500 family caregivers from the 1996 National Caregiver Survey, this study documents the ways in which dementia care is different from other types of family caregiving. Not only do dementia caregivers spend significantly more hours per week providing care than nondementia caregivers, they also report greater impacts in terms of employment complications, caregiver strain, mental and physical health problems, time for leisure and other family members, and family conflict. Differential impacts remain even after controlling for intensity of caregiving involvement and sociodemographic factors. Study findings suggest the need to tailor programs and services to the unique challenges faced by dementia caregivers.
Total citations
200020012002200320042005200620072008200920102011201220132014201520162017201820192020202120222023202421324970546557475855485964536164666579825573463110
Scholar articles