COVID-19 大流行期间老年人家庭照顾者的财务培训、健康行为和心理健康

Yujun Liu , M. Courtney Hughes , Heng Wang
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的本研究旨在考察 COVID-19 大流行期间老年人家庭照顾者的经济压力、健康行为和心理健康的变化,并探讨不同性别、种族和关系状况下心理健康结果的差异。方法利用 2020 年全国健康与老龄化趋势研究 COVID-19 补充资料,我们的样本包括 2026 名老年人家庭照顾者。结果与没有经济压力的照顾者相比,有经济压力的照顾者的心理健康状况更差。与男性或配偶照顾者相比,女性或成年子女照顾者报告的步行时间明显更少,经济压力更大,负面心理健康结果水平更高;与白人照顾者相比,非白人照顾者在大流行期间报告的积极心理健康结果更高。讨论卫生专业人员在设计和实施照顾者支持计划时,应考虑 COVID-19 在家庭照顾者中造成的经济和心理健康影响。创新之处这项研究提供了在 COVID-19 大流行期间和之后照顾老年人的人的几种重要健康行为和健康结果的全国代表性估计值,有助于填补关于健康和福祉受大流行影响最大的照顾者特征的知识空白。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Financial train, health behaviors, and psychological well-being of family caregivers of older adults during the COVID-19 pandemic

Objectives

This study aims to examine the change in financial strain, health behaviors, and psychological well-being of family caregivers of older adults during the COVID-19 pandemic and explore the differences in mental health outcomes by gender, race, and relationship status.

Methods

Using the 2020 National Health and Aging Trends Study COVID-19 supplement, our sample included 2026 family caregivers of older adults. Structural equation modeling was conducted.

Results

Caregivers with financial strain showed worse mental health than those with no financial strain. Female or adult children caregivers reported significantly less time walking, more financial strain, and a higher level of negative mental health outcomes compared to male or spouse caregivers; non-White caregivers reported greater positive mental health outcomes compared to White caregivers during the pandemic.

Discussion

Health professionals should consider the financial and mental health impact of COVID-19 among family caregivers when designing and delivering caregiver support programs.

Innovation

This study provides nationally representative estimates of several important health behaviors and health outcomes for caregivers of older adults during and after the COVID-19 pandemic, helping to fill the knowledge gap about the characteristics of caregivers whose health and well-being were most affected by the pandemic.

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来源期刊
PEC innovation
PEC innovation Medicine and Dentistry (General)
CiteScore
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