Gender Differences in Family Caregiving

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Transcription:

Gender Differences in Family Caregiving Darby Morhardt PhD, LCSW Associate Professor Cognitive Neurology and Alzheimer s Disease Center Department of Preventive Medicine Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine

Women Predominate Care for Older Adults 70-80% of older adults are cared for at home by family 57-81% of caregivers are women Most female caregivers are wives or adult daughters, middle aged and substantial number 65+ Care-receivers are chronically ill, frail, most have dementia Female caregivers have higher levels of depressive and anxiety symptoms and lower life satisfaction. Women provide care for a longer period of time and more time per day. Women have higher level of stressors Fewer social resources Report lower levels of psychological and physical thealth More women work outside the home Smaller families increase pressure on men to assume caregiving roles 20-33% of caregivers are men and increasing It appears that men approach caregiving differently

Gender Differences in the Caregiving Experience Motivation for Providing Care Attachment Emotional and social connectedness and sense of family obligation Women appear to be more concerned about the emotional well-being of people for whom they provide care. Attitudes Women express greater sense of responsibility towards family member, altruism and self sacrifice Complex mix of expectation and obligation also love and gratitude. Some studies suggest that male caregivers are also driven by similar sense of affection, commitment and family responsibility.

Gender Differences in the Caregiving Experience Time Spent and Duration Meta-analytic review of evidence supports women devote greater time to caregiving compared to men WHY? Gendered nature of paid work Women are less likely to be employed outside home Women s work roles are viewed as home centered and reflect greater sense of family obligation HOWEVER There are some inconsistencies on the amount of time spent between men and women Two meta-analytic reviews conclude differences were small Agreement that time spent is confounded by other variables Kinship (spouses vs children) Cultural and ethnic influences

Gender Differences in the Caregiving Experience Types of Tasks Studies find that women provide more personal care than men; however, differences are small Influenced by patient gender disability levels kinship caregivers marital and employments status family composition race/ethnicity

Gender Differences in the Caregiving Experience Role-Strain and Role-Conflict Role-Strain Occurs when one is unable to meet the expectations and obligations of multiple roles Role-overload competing demands overwhelm the ability to carry out role. Role-captivity feeling trapped in role Role-Conflict Perceived difficulties fulfilling the caregiver role Conflicting and incompatible demands Negative consequences emanating from this role Studies find that female caregivers experience greater role-strain and role-conflict than male caregivers Women have greater interference and limitations in their work and social life due to caregiving Greater role strain due to the more intense care they provide leading to greater health problems, less positive outlook on life and greater need for external support. Mediated by kinship

Gender Differences in Family Caregiving Probable Explanations Sociological Expectations of traditional gender roles Women are expected to adopt the role of caregiver, men are not Role socialization: social and cultural experiences from childhood lead to a different approach to caregiving Ingrained in women Historical labor segregation makes women more available Men may be less adept at expressing their difficulties or emotions Men may be less likely to report difficulties in providing care than women Empirical support for theory is lacking Stress Coping Theory Women have greater exposure to caregiving stressors and differ in appraisal, coping and availability of social support Empirical support is lacking Differences in coping strategies Women use more emotion-focused coping and other ineffective coping styles such as fantsy, wishful thinking, denial, escape, avoidance more than men Men have wider coping repertoire problem-solving, acceptance, detachment, distancing Could explain higher levels of caregiver burden in women

Gender Differences in Family Caregiving Other Variables Characteristics of the care-receiver Severity of illness Behavioral problems Disabilities Family composition Relationship with care-receiver Caregiver demographics Age Marital status Education, employment SES Culture / ethnicity

Culture / Ethnicity In some cultures female caregivers are at greatest risk for caregiver burden Familism prcedence given to the family needs over the needs of the indivdual Family-cohesion emotional bonding that family members have towards one another Filial responsibility (piety) tradition of caring for one s elders Gender differences within these variables is unclear. Higher burden is seen among female caregivers or similar levels of burden between the two genders Kinship factors are thought to have significant bearing on gender differences in caregiving. Greater burden or strain among spouses (usually wives) than children, although some studies find the reverse

Conclusion Women constitute the majority of caregivers. Proportion of men is steadily increasing. Large body of evidence indicates that women suffer more from negative consequences of providing care Gender differences have not been consistently or conclusively documented. Magnitude and significance of gender differences is uncertain. Majority of studies have been carried out among women; experience of male caregivers has been neglected. The effect of variables that mediate the influence of gender on outcomes of caregiving is uncertain. Methodological variations among studies complicate the true nature of gender differences. Need to address these areas. If gender differences are significant this has major implications for the development of gender-specific caregiver interventions and social policy recommendations to improve the experience of female caregivers.

References 1. Erol, R., Brooker, D., & Peel, E. (2015). Women and dementia: A global research review, Alzheimer s Disease International: The Global Voice on Dementia, London. 2. National Association for Caregiving; AARP Public Policy Institute. (2015). Caregiving in the U.S. Research Report 3. Sharma, N., Chakrabarti, S., & Grover, S. (2016). Gender differences in caregiving among family-caregivers of people with mental illnesses. World Journal of Psychiatry, 6(1), 7-17. 4. Williams, L.A., Giddings, L.S., Bellamy, G., & Gott, M. (2017). Because it s the wife who has to look after the man : A descriptive qualitative study of older women and the intersection of gender and the provision of family caregiving at the end of life. Palliative Medicine, 31(3), 223-230.

Thank You.