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Study
Finds that Caring for an Elderly, Sick
Spouse Sometimes has Positive Elements
BUFFALO, N.Y., June 23, 2010 --
Although long-term care of sick or disabled
loved ones is widely recognized as a threat
to the caregiver's health and quality of
life, a new study led by University at
Buffalo psychologist Michael Poulin, PhD,
finds that in some contexts, helping valued
loved ones may promote the well being of
helpers.
"Does a Helping Hand Mean a Heavy
Heart?," published in the journal Psychology
and Aging (2010, Vol. 25., No. 1), reports
on a study by Poulin and five co-authors
from the University of Michigan Department
of Internal Medicine, which closely analyzed
helping behavior and well-being among 73
spousal caregivers, many of them elderly.
Poulin, an assistant professor of
psychology, says the study team wanted to
learn if there were some positive aspects of
caregiving, aspects that did not provoke the
burnout, high stress and poor health
associated with being a caregiver. If so,
they wanted to know why these aspects had a
positive effect.
They learned that despite the
burdensome nature of their role, caregivers
experience more positive emotions and fewer
negative emotions when they engage in
"active care" like feeding, bathing,
toileting and otherwise physically caring
for the spouse.
"Our data don't tell us exactly what
psychological processes are responsible," he
says, "but we hypothesize that people may be
hardwired so that actively attending to the
concrete needs and feelings of others
reduces our personal anxiety."
The study found that passive care, on
the other hand, which requires the spouse to
simply be nearby in case anything should go
wrong, provokes negative emotions in the
caretaker, and leads to fewer positive
emotions.
The study involved 73 subjects (mean
age was 71.5 years, age range was 35-89
years) who were providing full-time home
care to an ailing spouse. Participants
carried Palm Pilots that beeped randomly to
signal them to report how much time they had
spent actively helping and/or being on call
since the last beep, the activities they
actually engaged in and their emotional
state at that moment.
The researchers found no moderating
effects of age on the association between
helping and well-being. In other words,
helping predicted positive and negative
effects similarly for adults of all ages.
One variable that did affect outcome was the
level of perceived interdependence with the
spouse experienced by the caregiver -- that
is, the extent to which caregivers viewed
themselves as sharing a mutually beneficial
relationship with their spouse.
"For interdependent couples, the
positive effects of active care were
particularly strong," Poulin says, adding
that this outcome supports the prediction
that "individuals should derive the greatest
satisfaction out of helping those with whom
they perceive a shared physical or emotional
fate."
Poulin says study findings have broad
implications for research on caregiving and
for research on helping behavior more
generally, especially in the aging context.
"Overall," he says, "we wouldn't say
that caring for an ailing loved one is going
to be good for you or healthy for you, but
certain activities may be beneficial,
especially in high-quality relationships."
Researchers and social scientists want
government or other agencies to provide
respite for caregivers, which would be a
good thing, Poulin says, "but as this study
demonstrates, it is extremely important that
caretakers receive the right kind of relief
at the right time -- perhaps less time off
from active care duties, and more time off
from the onerous task of passively
monitoring an ailing loved one."
The University at Buffalo is a premier
research-intensive public university, a
flagship institution in the State University
of New York system and its largest and most
comprehensive campus. UB's more than 28,000
students pursue their academic interests
through more than 300 undergraduate,
graduate and professional degree programs.
Founded in 1846, the University at Buffalo
is a member of the Association of American
Universities.
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