Caregiving Intensity, Stress, and Social Relationships in Mexican American Dementia and Non-Dementia Caregivers
Suyoung Kim, Anna Bokun, Sunshine Rote, Flavia Andrade, Phillip Cantu, Jacqueline Angel

TL;DR
This study explores how caregiving intensity affects stress in Mexican American caregivers, finding that social support reduces stress while negative interactions increase it, especially for dementia caregivers.
Contribution
The study identifies how social relationships mediate the impact of caregiving intensity on stress, with specific insights into dementia and non-dementia caregivers.
Findings
Social support reduces stress from caregiving intensity, particularly for non-dementia caregivers.
Negative interactions increase stress, especially among dementia caregivers.
Dementia caregivers experience a stronger link between caregiving intensity and perceived stress.
Abstract
Mexican American caregivers often face intensive caregiving demands, which may be further complicated or protected by social and family dynamics. This study examines the mediating roles of social relationships, including support, negative interactions, and familism, in the relationship between caregiving intensity and perceived stress. Using the stress process paradigm, we assess whether these factors increase or reduce caregiver perceived stress and explore differences between dementia and non-dementia caregivers. Data from the Hispanic Established Populations for the Epidemiologic Study of the Elderly (Wave 9, N = 457) were analyzed using Structural Equation Modeling. Social support, negative interaction, familism, and perceived stress were modeled as latent constructs. A multiple-group SEM approach assessed differences in caregiving paths between dementia and non-dementia caregivers.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDementia and Cognitive Impairment Research · Family Caregiving in Mental Illness · Intergenerational Family Dynamics and Caregiving
