Effects of caregiving status and changes in depressive symptoms on development of physical morbidity among long-term cancer caregivers Journal Article


Authors: Shaffer, K. M.; Kim, Y.; Carver, C. S.; Cannady, R. S.
Article Title: Effects of caregiving status and changes in depressive symptoms on development of physical morbidity among long-term cancer caregivers
Abstract: Objective: Cancer caregiving burden is known to vary across the survivorship trajectory and has been linked with caregivers' subsequent health impairment. Little is known, however, regarding how risk factors during long-term survivorship relate to vulnerability to caregivers' health during that period. This study examined effects of caregiving status and depressive symptoms on development of physical morbidity by 5 years postdiagnosis. Method: Family caregivers (N = 491; M-age = 55.78) completed surveys at 2 (Time 1 [T1]) and 5 years (T2) after their care recipients' cancer diagnosis. Demographic and caregiving context variables known to affect caregivers' health were assessed at T1. Self-reported depressive symptoms and a list of physical morbid conditions were assessed at T1 and T2. Caregiving status (former, current, or bereaved) was assessed at T2. Results: Hierarchical negative binomial regression revealed that current caregivers at T2 (p<.02), but not those bereaved by T2 (p=.32), developed more physical morbid conditions between T1 and T2 compared with former caregivers, controlling for other variables. Independently, caregivers reporting either newly emerging or chronically elevated depressive symptoms at T2 (ps=.03), but not those whose symptoms remitted at T2 (p=.61), showed greater development of physical morbidity than did those reporting minimal depressive symptoms at both T1 and T2. Conclusions: Results highlight the roles of long-term caregiving demands and depressive symptoms in cancer caregivers' premature physical health decline. Clinical attention through the long-term survivorship trajectory should be emphasized for caregivers of patients with recurrent or prolonged illness and to address caregivers' elevated depressive symptoms.
Keywords: prospective studies; depression; survivorship; quality-of-life; prostate-cancer; united-states; myocardial-infarction; family caregivers; coronary-heart-disease; self-report; older persons; family caregiver; informal caregivers; chronic stress; cardiovascular events
Journal Title: Health Psychology
Volume: 36
Issue: 8
ISSN: 0278-6133
Publisher: American Psychological Association  
Date Published: 2017-08-01
Start Page: 770
End Page: 778
Language: English
ACCESSION: WOS:000406106200006
DOI: 10.1037/hea0000528
PROVIDER: wos
PMCID: PMC5551905
PUBMED: 28639819
Notes: Article -- Source: Wos
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  1. Kelly M Shaffer
    23 Shaffer