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Race differences in emotional adaptation of family caregivers
Author(s)Kimberly A Skarupski, Judy J McCann, Julia L Bienias
Journal titleAging & Mental Health, vol 13, no 5, September 2009
PublisherTaylor & Francis, September 2009
Pagespp 715-724
Sourcehttp://www.tandfonline.com
KeywordsBlack people ; White people ; Family care ; Adjustment ; Comparison ; Longitudinal surveys ; United States of America.
AnnotationThis study compares black and white caregivers of people with Alzheimer's disease (AD) on two general measures of negative and positive emotion (depressive symptoms, positive mood) and two caregiving specific measures of negative and positive emotion (caregiver burden, caregiver satisfaction). The authors hypothesised that black caregivers would exhibit lower levels of negative emotion and higher levels of positive emotion over time than whites. 396 caregivers were recruited from the Rush Alzheimer's Disease Center in Chicago, Illinois, as part of a longitudinal study of people with AD. The analyses for this report are based on data from 307 caregivers who were interviewed quarterly over approximately 4 years from 1999 to 2002, an average of nine observations per person. The results showed that black caregivers reported fewer depressive symptoms over time than whites, but this finding was only for those caregivers living with the care recipient with AD. No race differences were found for measures of positive emotion. The data adds to the growing body of evidence that black people have better emotional outcomes when exposed to the stress of providing informal care to a disabled family member. (KJ/RH).
Accession NumberCPA-091109214 A
ClassmarkTKE: TKA: P6:SJ: DR: 48: 3J: 7T

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