Caregiver strain among Chinese adult children of oldest old parents

The fast growth of the Chinese oldest old population indicates higher demand for long-term care. In China, families assume the primary responsibility of caring for older adults. Since the oldest elders are more likely to be widowed, their adult children usually be...

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Main Author: Liu, Jinyu
Other Authors: Bern-Klug, Mercedes
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: University of Iowa 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ir.uiowa.edu/etd/2568
https://ir.uiowa.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=4697&context=etd
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spelling ndltd-uiowa.edu-oai-ir.uiowa.edu-etd-46972019-10-13T05:06:40Z Caregiver strain among Chinese adult children of oldest old parents Liu, Jinyu The fast growth of the Chinese oldest old population indicates higher demand for long-term care. In China, families assume the primary responsibility of caring for older adults. Since the oldest elders are more likely to be widowed, their adult children usually become their caregivers. Focusing on the Chinese adult children who provide care for their oldest-old parents, this study documented and helped to explain Chinese adult children's caregiving strain. A conceptual framework was developed based on Pearlin's stress process theory, Higgins' framework of self-concept discrepancy, and previous studies on family caregivers of elders. Using an existing dataset from the 2005 Chinese Longitudinal Healthy Longevity Survey of 895 caregivers and their care recipients, the researcher tested whether and how caregiving context (caregiver's structured context and care recipients' needs for care), caregiving performance, and sibling support were related to five types of caregiving strain including sacrifice strain, exhaustion strain, capability strain, expectation strain, and dependency strain. The results indicate that caregiving context and caregiving performance are statistically related to different types of caregiver strain. Three independent variables in the set of caregiving context, self-evaluation of living standard, education, and cultural identity, were related to two types of caregiver strain in different directions. The caregivers who were the eldest sons, who were females caring for female elders, who had a close relationship with their care recipients, who lived with the care recipients, who provided care for the elders with more needs for care in ADL (Activities of Daily Living), or whose care recipients had health insurance reported higher levels of at least one type of caregiver strain. Care recipients' cognitive status and entitlement to pension were negatively related to at least one type of caregiver strain. Caregivers' rural residence, having a job outside the family, having a child under age 16, and care recipient's needs for care in IADL (Instrumental Activities of Daily Living) were not found to be related to any type of caregiver strain. Monetary assistance, which was indicated by the proportion of their annual household per capita income that the caregivers provided to care recipients, was found to be positively related to caregivers' capability strain. The amount of time spent in caregiving (time assistance) was positively related to three types of caregiver strain: exhaustion, expectation, and dependency strain. Time assistance was also found to mediate the relationship between care recipients' needs for care in ADL and caregivers' exhaustion strain and the relationship between dependency strain and three caregiving context variables: closeness between caregivers and care recipients, co-residence with care recipients, and care recipients' needs for care in ADL. The results revealed the importance of caregiving context and caregiving performance in explaining Chinese adult-child caregivers' experience and the necessity of investigating caregiver strain in different dimensions. This study contributes to understanding caregiver strain from a filial perspective. The results imply directions for future research, social work practice and education, and policy legislation in addressing Chinese adult children's strain in caring for their oldest-old parents. 2013-05-01T07:00:00Z dissertation application/pdf https://ir.uiowa.edu/etd/2568 https://ir.uiowa.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=4697&context=etd Copyright 2013 Jinyu Liu Theses and Dissertations eng University of IowaBern-Klug, Mercedes Caregiver China Filial piety Oldest old Social work Strain Clinical and Medical Social Work
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Caregiver
China
Filial piety
Oldest old
Social work
Strain
Clinical and Medical Social Work
spellingShingle Caregiver
China
Filial piety
Oldest old
Social work
Strain
Clinical and Medical Social Work
Liu, Jinyu
Caregiver strain among Chinese adult children of oldest old parents
description The fast growth of the Chinese oldest old population indicates higher demand for long-term care. In China, families assume the primary responsibility of caring for older adults. Since the oldest elders are more likely to be widowed, their adult children usually become their caregivers. Focusing on the Chinese adult children who provide care for their oldest-old parents, this study documented and helped to explain Chinese adult children's caregiving strain. A conceptual framework was developed based on Pearlin's stress process theory, Higgins' framework of self-concept discrepancy, and previous studies on family caregivers of elders. Using an existing dataset from the 2005 Chinese Longitudinal Healthy Longevity Survey of 895 caregivers and their care recipients, the researcher tested whether and how caregiving context (caregiver's structured context and care recipients' needs for care), caregiving performance, and sibling support were related to five types of caregiving strain including sacrifice strain, exhaustion strain, capability strain, expectation strain, and dependency strain. The results indicate that caregiving context and caregiving performance are statistically related to different types of caregiver strain. Three independent variables in the set of caregiving context, self-evaluation of living standard, education, and cultural identity, were related to two types of caregiver strain in different directions. The caregivers who were the eldest sons, who were females caring for female elders, who had a close relationship with their care recipients, who lived with the care recipients, who provided care for the elders with more needs for care in ADL (Activities of Daily Living), or whose care recipients had health insurance reported higher levels of at least one type of caregiver strain. Care recipients' cognitive status and entitlement to pension were negatively related to at least one type of caregiver strain. Caregivers' rural residence, having a job outside the family, having a child under age 16, and care recipient's needs for care in IADL (Instrumental Activities of Daily Living) were not found to be related to any type of caregiver strain. Monetary assistance, which was indicated by the proportion of their annual household per capita income that the caregivers provided to care recipients, was found to be positively related to caregivers' capability strain. The amount of time spent in caregiving (time assistance) was positively related to three types of caregiver strain: exhaustion, expectation, and dependency strain. Time assistance was also found to mediate the relationship between care recipients' needs for care in ADL and caregivers' exhaustion strain and the relationship between dependency strain and three caregiving context variables: closeness between caregivers and care recipients, co-residence with care recipients, and care recipients' needs for care in ADL. The results revealed the importance of caregiving context and caregiving performance in explaining Chinese adult-child caregivers' experience and the necessity of investigating caregiver strain in different dimensions. This study contributes to understanding caregiver strain from a filial perspective. The results imply directions for future research, social work practice and education, and policy legislation in addressing Chinese adult children's strain in caring for their oldest-old parents.
author2 Bern-Klug, Mercedes
author_facet Bern-Klug, Mercedes
Liu, Jinyu
author Liu, Jinyu
author_sort Liu, Jinyu
title Caregiver strain among Chinese adult children of oldest old parents
title_short Caregiver strain among Chinese adult children of oldest old parents
title_full Caregiver strain among Chinese adult children of oldest old parents
title_fullStr Caregiver strain among Chinese adult children of oldest old parents
title_full_unstemmed Caregiver strain among Chinese adult children of oldest old parents
title_sort caregiver strain among chinese adult children of oldest old parents
publisher University of Iowa
publishDate 2013
url https://ir.uiowa.edu/etd/2568
https://ir.uiowa.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=4697&context=etd
work_keys_str_mv AT liujinyu caregiverstrainamongchineseadultchildrenofoldestoldparents
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