Journals of Gerontology Series B: Psychological Sciences and Social Sciences
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Journals of Gerontology Series B: Psychological Sciences and Social Sciences, Vol 51, Issue 6 S297-S306, Copyright © 1996 by The Gerontological Society of America


ARTICLES

Sources of support and interpersonal stress in the networks of married caregiving daughters: findings from a 2-year longitudinal study

JJ Suitor and K Pillemer
Department of Sociology, Louisiana State University, USA. sosuit@lsuvm.sncc.lsu.edu

This research uses data collected on 57 married daughters and 1,069 members of their social networks to examine patterns of social support and interpersonal stress across the first two years of caring for parents with dementia. Reports by the caregivers indicated that friends were the most prominent source of emotional support, while siblings were the greatest source of instrumental support and interpersonal stress, both shortly after the parent's diagnosis and two years later. Multivariate analyses demonstrated that associates who had cared for family members themselves were more likely to have been sources of instrumental support both shortly after diagnosis and two years later. Caregiving similarity was also the most important factor in explaining both emotional support and interpersonal stress at T1; however, its effect diminished across the subsequent two years. These findings suggest that experiential similarity may become less important in explaining some dimensions of interpersonal relations as individuals move further from status transitions.


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Research on AgingHome page
T. M. Parrott and V. L. Bengtson
The Effects of Earlier Intergenerational Affection, Normative Expectations, and Family Conflict on Contemporary Exchanges of Help and Support
Research on Aging, January 1, 1999; 21(1): 73 - 105.
[Abstract] [PDF]




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