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Family demands, social support and caregiver burden in Taiwanese family caregivers living with mental illness: the role of family caregiver gender
Author(s) -
Hsiao ChiuYueh
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
journal of clinical nursing
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.94
H-Index - 102
eISSN - 1365-2702
pISSN - 0962-1067
DOI - 10.1111/j.1365-2702.2010.03315.x
Subject(s) - caregiver burden , social support , family caregivers , caregiver stress , psychological intervention , mental illness , psychology , mental health , family support , scale (ratio) , clinical psychology , psychiatry , medicine , gerontology , dementia , disease , social psychology , physics , pathology , quantum mechanics , physical therapy
Aim. The purpose of this study was to assess gender effects on family demands, social support and caregiver burden as well as to examine contributing factors of caregiver burden in caring for family members with mental illness. Background. Providing continued care and support for people with mental illness is demanding and challenging. Findings of earlier caregiving studies on the role of caregiver gender in response to caregiver burden and caregiving‐related factors have been inconsistent. Little research has been undertaken to examine gender effect on family demands, social support and caregiver burden in Taiwanese family caregivers of individuals with mental illness. Design. Cross‐sectional, descriptive correlation design. Methods. Data from 43 families, including at least one male and female family caregiver in each family, were analysed using descriptive statistics, principal component analysis and mixed linear modelling. Demographic data, Perceived Stress Scale, Perceived Social Support and Caregiver Burden Scale‐Brief were used to collect data. Results. Female family caregivers perceived less social support and experienced higher degrees of caregiver burden compared with male family caregivers. In contrast, no significant gender effect was associated with family demands. Family caregivers with greater family demands and less social support experienced higher degrees of caregiver burden. Conclusions. The results reinforced those of previously published studies that caregiver burden is highly prevalent among female family caregivers. Caregiver gender appears to be highly valuable for explaining family demands, social support and caregiver burden. Relevance to clinical practice. Health care professionals should continue to collaborate with family caregivers to assess potential gender effects on available support and design gender‐specific interventions to alleviate caregiver burden.