The psychosocial impact of caregiving on young people who have a parent with an illness or disability: Comparisons between young caregivers and noncaregivers


Autoria(s): Pakenham, KI; Bursnall, S; Chiu, J; Cannon, T; Okochi, M
Contribuinte(s)

T.R. Elliott

Data(s)

01/01/2006

Resumo

Objective: To investigate the psychosocial impact of young caregiving by empirically validating prominent qualitative themes.. This was achieved through developing an inventory called the Young Caregiver of Parents Inventory (YCOPI) designed to assess these themes and by comparing young caregivers and noncaregivers. Method: Two hundred forty-five participants between 10 and 25 years completed questionnaires: 100 young caregivers and 145 noncaregivers. In addition to the YCOPI, the following variables were measured: demographics, caregiving context, social support, appraisal, coping strategies, and adjustment (health, life satisfaction, distress, positive affect). Results: Eight reliable factors emerged from the YCOPI that described the diverse impacts of caregiving and reflected the key themes reported in prior research. The factors were related to most caregiving context variables and theoretically relevant stress and coping variables. Compared with noncaregivers, young caregivers reported higher levels of young caregiving impact, less reliance on problem-solving coping, and higher somatization and lower life satisfaction. Conclusions: Findings delineate key impacts of young caregiving and highlight the importance of ensuring that measures used in research on young caregivers are sensitive to issues pertinent to this population.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:81111

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Educational Publishing Foundation

Palavras-Chave #Young Caregivers #Coping #Childhood Caregiving #Psychosocial Impact #Parental Illness Or Disability #Mental-health #Psychological Distress #Qualitative Research #Behavioral-problems #Multiple-sclerosis #Cancer-patients #Social Support #Children #Carers #Stress #Psychology, Clinical #Rehabilitation #C1 #380107 Health, Clinical and Counselling Psychology #730219 Behaviour and health
Tipo

Journal Article