# Need Satisfaction Indirectly Associated With Lower Caregiver Burden & Cytokine Production in Dementia Caregivers

**Authors:** Kate Bishop, Jensine Paoletti-Hatcher, Daniel L Argueta, Kelly N Brice, Bryan T Denny, Charles Green, Samantha Henry, Christopher P Fagundes

PMC · DOI: 10.1093/geroni/igaf122.3628 · 2025-12-31

## TL;DR

Higher psychological needs satisfaction in dementia caregivers is linked to lower stress and inflammation through increased autonomy.

## Contribution

This study empirically supports self-determination theory in caregiving by showing indirect effects on health outcomes.

## Key findings

- Higher PNS reduces cytokine production via increased autonomy in caregivers.
- Greater PNS is associated with lower caregiver burden through higher autonomy.
- Longitudinal research is needed to confirm PNS as a causal factor in caregiver resilience.

## Abstract

Spousal dementia caregiving is a chronic stressor linked to systemic inflammation and poor health. Self-determination theory (SDT) may provide a useful framework for identifying which caregivers are at the greatest risk. SDT posits that psychological needs satisfaction (PNS) may increase the relative autonomy caregivers perceive within their relationship, contributing to increased well-being overall. We tested a causal association hypothesized in SDT: higher PNS should be indirectly associated with greater well-being through more autonomous motivation. We examined the indirect effect of PNS on self-reported caregiver burden and cytokine production through autonomous motivation for caregiving in cross-sectional analyses of 108 caregivers (M = 72.18, SD = 7.69; 72.22% women; 53.70% advanced degree holders). Participants reported demographics and health information, caregiver burden (ZBI), autonomous motivation for caregiving (modified Self-Regulation Questionnaire; α = .84), and relationship-oriented PNS (modified Needs Satisfaction Scale; α = .86). LPS-stimulated cytokines (IL-6, IL-10, TNF-α, and IL-1β) from whole blood were combined in a linear composite (α = .85) before we ran mediation analyses in lavaan. We found that higher PNS was associated with lower cytokine production through higher relative autonomy (indirect effect = ˗0.15, 95% CI [˗0.28, ˗0.013]). We also found that higher PNS was associated with lower caregiver burden through higher relative autonomy (indirect effect = ˗0.11, 95% CI [˗0.21, ˗0.023]). Dementia is degenerative and requires caregivers to adapt regularly to meet changing demands; longitudinal or time-lagged research is needed to capture the role of PNS as a possible causal factor in caregiver resilience.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** dementia (MONDO:0001627)

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12761636