Greater Positivity Resonance Is Associated With Better Mental Health in Dementia Caregivers
Jenna Wells, Suzanne Shdo, Claire Yee, Diana Heath, Barbara Fredrickson, Robert Levenson

TL;DR
Caregivers of people with dementia who share more positive emotions with their loved ones tend to have better mental health.
Contribution
This study introduces a behavioral measure of positivity resonance in caregiver-dementia patient interactions and links it to mental health outcomes.
Findings
Higher positivity resonance in caregiver-PWD conversations correlates with better emotional well-being in caregivers.
Greater positivity resonance is associated with lower depression and anxiety in caregivers.
These associations remain significant after controlling for dementia severity and other factors.
Abstract
As a group, family caregivers of people with dementia (PWDs) have substantially elevated levels of depression and anxiety, compared to same-aged non-caregiving adults. However, there is striking variation in mental health among individual caregivers. Previous research on predictors of the sources of these individual differences has focused on characteristics of individual caregivers and PWDs (rather than on the caregiver-PWD relationship), self-report measures (rather than behavioral measures), and negative emotion (rather than positive emotion). We examined 185 caregiver-PWD dyads who had an unrehearsed 10-minute conversation about an area of conflict in the laboratory. Video recordings were coded for Behavioral Indicators of Positivity Resonance (BIPR), which derives from Positivity Resonance Theory and assesses dyad-level behavioral expressions of positive affect, mutual warmth, and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDementia and Cognitive Impairment Research · Family Caregiving in Mental Illness · Mental Health Research Topics
