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Carer burden: Associations with attachment, self-efficacy, and care-seeking

Authors :
Marita P. McCabe
Juwon Lee
Emma M. Marshall
Daniel Romano
Ellie R. Mullins
Judith A. Feeney
Gery C. Karantzas
Jeffry A. Simpson
Source :
Journal of Social and Personal Relationships. 39:1213-1236
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
SAGE Publications, 2021.

Abstract

Familial caregiving research is yet to examine the factors that underpin the association between attachment insecurity and carer burden. Furthermore, previous research consists largely of data collected at a single point in time. This paper addresses these gaps by reporting on a study involving 57 parent–child dyads to determine whether adult children’s caregiving self-efficacy mediates the association between carer attachment insecurity and carer burden. Furthermore, care-recipient care-seeking style was investigated as a moderator of the association between carer’s attachment insecurity and their self-efficacy. Carers completed self-report measures of attachment orientations at baseline, caregiving self-efficacy at 3 months, and carer burden at 6 months. At 3 months, dyads also engaged in a video-recorded caregiving discussion task assessing care-recipient’s observed care-seeking style. The mediation effects of carer attachment orientations on burden through caregiving self-efficacy were contingent on care-recipient indirect-constructive care-seeking. Findings highlight the complex interplay between carer attachment orientations, caregiving self-efficacy, and care-recipient care-seeking style in predicting the burden experienced by adult children.

Details

ISSN :
14603608 and 02654075
Volume :
39
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Social and Personal Relationships
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........b4f97513ed4622e8f061f5127eec9f0a