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Health Trajectories of Women in China: The Role of Parental Caregiving

Liu, Guangya; & Dupre, Matthew E. (2014). Health Trajectories of Women in China: The Role of Parental Caregiving. Journals of Gerontology Series B: Psychological Sciences and Social Sciences.

Liu, Guangya; & Dupre, Matthew E. (2014). Health Trajectories of Women in China: The Role of Parental Caregiving. Journals of Gerontology Series B: Psychological Sciences and Social Sciences.

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Objectives. Studies show that caregiving can have negative consequences on the psychological and physical health of its providers. However, few studies have examined the immediate and long-term impact of caregiving on health and none have considered these longitudinal associations among women in a predominately family-care society such as China.Method. Six waves of data from the Ever-Married Women Survey component of the China Health and Nutrition Survey (n = 6,178) are used for analysis. Multivariate latent growth models are used to examine trajectories of self-rated health associated with providing care to parents (parental caregiving) among young-adult and middle-aged women in China.Results. Results show that women who are caregivers to their parents have consistently worse self-reported health than women who do not have caregiving responsibilities. We find that caregivers—especially those who provide high-intensity care—exhibit initially low levels of health, followed by a period of health improvement that is comparable to noncaregivers. However, this pattern of role adaptation in women is followed by a precipitous decline in self-rated health in later years.Discussion. The findings demonstrate the subjective health consequences of caregiving for women in China and provide new evidence to support the life course processes of wear-and-tear and role adaptation.




JOUR



Liu, Guangya
Dupre, Matthew E.



2014


Journals of Gerontology Series B: Psychological Sciences and Social Sciences










10.1093/geronb/gbu144



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