4.7 Article

Cancer Caregiving Predicts Physical Impairments: Roles of Earlier Caregiving Stress and Being a Spousal Caregiver

Journal

CANCER
Volume 121, Issue 2, Pages 302-310

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/cncr.29040

Keywords

cancer caregivers; caregiving stress; arthritis; chronic back pain; heart diseases; longitudinal study

Categories

Funding

  1. American Cancer Society National Home Office
  2. American Cancer Society [121909-RSG-12-042-01-CPPB]
  3. University of Miami

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BACKGROUNDThe objective of this study was to investigate associations between earlier caregiving experience and the development of physical impairments over the subsequent 6 years among family caregivers of patients with cancer. METHODSFamily caregivers of cancer survivors participated in a nationwide survey 2 years after their relative's cancer diagnosis (T1) (N=1517) with follow-up at 5 years (T2) and 8 years (T3) postdiagnosis. Caregivers self-reported their demographics and levels of caregiving stress at T1. Caregiving status (former for those whose patient was remission, bereaved for those whose patient had died, and current) and the presence of 3 physical impairments (arthritis, chronic back pain, and heart-related diseases) at the time of assessment were measured at T1 through T3. RESULTSCaregiving stress was significantly related to concurrent presence of the 3 impairment markers at T1. Stressed caregivers also were more likely to develop heart diseases, and spousal caregivers were more likely than other caregivers to develop arthritis and chronic back pain several years after the initial caregiving experience (at T2 and T3). These effects were independent of age, sex, education, and income at T1, and they were also independent of caregiving status at each assessment. CONCLUSIONSThe current findings suggest that the adverse long-term health effects of earlier caregiving stress and of being a spousal caregiver should be acknowledged and that caregiving-related stress management programs should be incorporated into routine health care for family caregivers of cancer patients. Cancer 2015;121:302-10. (c) 2014 American Cancer Society. Stressed caregivers are more likely to develop heart disease and spousal caregivers are more likely than other caregivers to develop arthritis and chronic back pain years after the initial caregiving experience. The current results provide the first evidence that subjective caregiving stress and spousal role independently have aggravating effects on caregivers' physical health.

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