By ESTHER ROBARDS-FORBES – UT AUSTIN
The study, published in the journal Advances in Life Course Research, found that depression in adult caregivers is mostly driven by having a loved one experiencing serious health problems, while becoming a caregiver is associated with fewer symptoms of depression.
“Decades of research on this topic indicate that there are positive and negative aspects to being a caregiver,” says Sae Hwang Han, an assistant professor in the human development and family sciences at the University of Texas at Austin.
“It’s widely assumed the negatives far outweigh the positives, that caregiving is a chronic stressor and that it contributes to worse health and well-being. But the evidence doesn’t always bear that out.”
Recent studies have found that caregivers live longer than noncaregivers and that many caregivers describe caregiving as a positive experience that gives them meaning and purpose. It was these contradictions that led Han to conduct the study.
“Most previous studies start by identifying caregivers and compare their well-being to noncaregivers,” Han says. “But having a loved one experience a serious health problem in later life is itself a very depressing event.
“It’s unsurprising that these studies would find a heightened risk of depression in caregivers compared to noncaregivers, who often do not have serious health problems in the family. That’s a misleading comparison, just as it would be misleading to compare the well-being of someone going through chemotherapy to someone who doesn’t have cancer.”
Han followed a group of adult children over the age of 50 who had a living mother. He tracked changes in their mental health as some of the mothers became disabled or cognitively impaired and the adult children became caregivers. Han found that adult children became more depressed as their mothers’ health deteriorated but found no evidence that becoming a caregiver worsened their depression.
“Rather, I found that caregiving alleviated the extent to which adult children became depressed in response to their mothers’ health problems, suggesting that there may be something protective about being able to help others we care about,” Han says.
A 2021 study by Han and colleagues found that spouses providing caregiving to their partners saw similar effects.
About 1 in 5 Americans are providing caregiving to an adult with health and functional needs, and about half of people over 50 are caregivers to older adults. Many people can expect to enter the caregiving role at some point in their lives, Han points out. While emphasizing the importance of social and policy interventions that continue to support caregivers, Han also says that this role does not have to be a source of dread and depression.
“There is no disputing that caregiving can be a very stressful experience,” he says. “But some stressful experiences also make you more resilient and help you grow.”
The Center on Aging and Population Sciences and the Population Research Center at the University of Texas at Austin, the National Institute on Aging, and the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development supported the work.
Source: UT Austin
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Previously Published on futurity.org with Creative Commons License
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