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      Spouses, adult children, and children-in-law as caregivers of older adults: a meta-analytic comparison.

      Psychology and Aging
      Aged, Caregivers, psychology, Cost of Illness, Depression, etiology, Family Relations, Female, Humans, Male, Parents, Socioeconomic Factors, Spouses, Stress, Psychological

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          Abstract

          The present meta-analysis integrates the results from 168 empirical studies on differences between caregiving spouses, adult children, and children-in-law. Spouses differ from children and children-in-law significantly with regard to sociodemographic variables; also, they provide more support but report fewer care recipient behavior problems. Spouse caregivers report more depression symptoms, greater financial and physical burden, and lower levels of psychological well-being. Higher levels of psychological distress among spouses are explained mostly--but not completely--by higher levels of care provision. Few differences emerge between children and children-in-law, but children-in-law perceive the relationship with the care recipient as less positive and they report fewer uplifts of caregiving. (c) 2011 APA, all rights reserved.

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