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Appraisal, coping, and social support as mediators of well-being in Black and White family caregivers of patients with Alzheimer's disease.
392
Citations
22
References
1996
Year
NursingFamily MedicinePsychiatryGeriatricsLess DepressionDementiaMedicineCaregiverElderly CareFamily PsychologySocial SciencesMental HealthWhite Family CaregiversStress Process ModelSocial SupportPsychology
Family caregivers of patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD) commonly have high levels of psychological distress. Black caregivers often report less depression than White caregivers, but the process underlying this difference is poorly understood. With the use of a stress process model, 123 White and 74 Black family caregivers of patients with AD and other progressive dementias were studied. Black caregivers appraised patient problems as less stressful and reported higher self-efficacy in managing caregiving problems and less depression than did White caregivers. White and Black caregivers also differed significantly in coping responses but not in social supports. Structural equation analyses indicated that the correlational structure of the stress process was similar in White and Black caregivers. Caregiving stressors and race did not affect well-being through direct paths, but they were mediated by effects for appraisal, social support and activity, and coping. Possible cultural mechanisms explaining the better adjustment among Black caregivers are discussed.
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