The Association of the Number of Informal Caregiving Roles with Depression: Moderation of Self-Esteem
Sehyun Baek, Ernest Gonzales, Shicheng Xu

TL;DR
This study explores how the number of caregiving roles affects depression and finds that higher self-esteem can reduce this impact.
Contribution
The study identifies self-esteem as a moderator in the relationship between multiple caregiving roles and depression.
Findings
Having one or more caregiving roles is significantly associated with higher depression levels.
Higher self-esteem reduces the negative impact of caregiving roles on depression.
The study suggests expanding caregiver support programs to address multiple caregiving roles.
Abstract
Demographic changes, a decline in the ratio of potential caregivers to the number of adults who need care, highlight the growing prevalence of multiple caregiving roles (e.g., double-decker sandwich caregiving). However, little is known about the extent to which the number of caregiving roles is associated with depression. We examined the association between the number of caregiving roles (no role, 1 caregiving role, and 2+ caregiving roles), derived from caregiving for grandchildren, parents with Activities of Daily Livings (ADLs), parents with Instrumental Activities of Daily Livings (IADLs), spouse with ADLs, and spouse with IADLs) and depression, and whether self-esteem moderates this association. We utilized the data from the 2022 Health and Retirement Study (HRS) and RAND HRS (n = 2,259), guided by the Stress Process Model that posits self-esteem as a resource in the association…
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Taxonomy
TopicsIntergenerational Family Dynamics and Caregiving · Family Caregiving in Mental Illness · Family Support in Illness
