Volunteering Transitions and Psychological Well-Being in Family Caregivers of Older Adults
Sol Baik, Jennifer Crittenden, Kyeongmo Kim

TL;DR
The study explores how starting or stopping formal volunteering affects the psychological well-being of family caregivers, finding that sustained volunteering is beneficial and that gender differences exist when volunteering ceases.
Contribution
The study introduces new insights into how transitions in volunteering affect caregiver well-being, particularly highlighting gender-specific responses to ceasing formal volunteer activities.
Findings
Caregivers who consistently volunteered reported significantly better psychological outcomes than those who never volunteered.
Ceasing formal volunteering was associated with improved psychological well-being among male caregivers.
The positive effects of sustained volunteering were consistent across both women and men.
Abstract
Despite their commitment to caregiving, approximately 25% of family and other unpaid caregivers of older adults in the U.S. participated in formal volunteer activities in 2017. Formal volunteering has been associated with improved psychological well-being, as it offers an additional social role that can enhance self-esteem and expand social networks. However, little is known about how discontinuing volunteering affects caregiver well-being. We hypothesized that ceasing volunteer activity may result in role loss or identity disruption, potentially diminishing psychological well-being, with particular attention to gender differences. Using data from Rounds 5 and 7 of the National Study of Caregiving, we examined the longitudinal effects of starting and stopping formal volunteering on the well-being of 1,148 family and unpaid caregivers of Medicare beneficiaries living in the community. A…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNonprofit Sector and Volunteering · Intergenerational Family Dynamics and Caregiving · Health disparities and outcomes
