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Purpose in life moderates the relationship between loneliness and caregiving stress among family caregivers of people with mental health problems.
Arch Psychiatr Nurs. 2024 Apr; 49:99-105.AP

Abstract

OBJECTIVE

Providing care to others can exert a profound impact on caregivers' sense of purpose or meaning in life, thereby reciprocally influencing the caregivers' overall health and well-being. This study aims to investigate whether the sense of purpose in life moderates the association between loneliness and caregiving stress among family caregivers of people with mental health problems.

METHODS

A sample of family caregivers of people with mental health problems (N = 468, 57.1 % female) drawn from the 2020 survey of the Caregiving in the U.S. was investigated. Descriptive statistics, correlation analysis, and a multiple regression with an interaction term were performed.

RESULTS

Higher levels of loneliness were associated with enhanced caregiving stress. Moreover, after demographic and care-related factors were controlled for, the association between loneliness and caregiving stress was moderated by purpose in life; namely, as the sense of purpose in life increased, so did the intensity of the relationship between loneliness and caregiving stress.

CONCLUSION

Reducing loneliness or strengthening the sense of purpose helps alleviate caregiving stress, and lonely family caregivers with a strong sense of purpose deserve extra attention.

Authors+Show Affiliations

School of Government, Shanghai University of Political Science and Law, Shanghai 201701, China. Electronic address: huazhiya@shupl.edu.cn.School of Sociology and Political Science, Shanghai University, Shanghai 200444, China. Electronic address: tangdi@shu.edu.cn.

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article

Language

eng

PubMed ID

38734461

Citation

Hua, Zhiya, and Dandan Ma. "Purpose in Life Moderates the Relationship Between Loneliness and Caregiving Stress Among Family Caregivers of People With Mental Health Problems." Archives of Psychiatric Nursing, vol. 49, 2024, pp. 99-105.
Hua Z, Ma D. Purpose in life moderates the relationship between loneliness and caregiving stress among family caregivers of people with mental health problems. Arch Psychiatr Nurs. 2024;49:99-105.
Hua, Z., & Ma, D. (2024). Purpose in life moderates the relationship between loneliness and caregiving stress among family caregivers of people with mental health problems. Archives of Psychiatric Nursing, 49, 99-105. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.apnu.2024.02.009
Hua Z, Ma D. Purpose in Life Moderates the Relationship Between Loneliness and Caregiving Stress Among Family Caregivers of People With Mental Health Problems. Arch Psychiatr Nurs. 2024;49:99-105. PubMed PMID: 38734461.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Purpose in life moderates the relationship between loneliness and caregiving stress among family caregivers of people with mental health problems. AU - Hua,Zhiya, AU - Ma,Dandan, Y1 - 2024/02/21/ PY - 2023/11/15/received PY - 2024/02/05/revised PY - 2024/02/18/accepted PY - 2024/5/12/medline PY - 2024/5/12/pubmed PY - 2024/5/11/entrez KW - Buffering effect KW - Loneliness KW - Purpose in life KW - Sense of meaning KW - Stress SP - 99 EP - 105 JF - Archives of psychiatric nursing JO - Arch Psychiatr Nurs VL - 49 N2 - OBJECTIVE: Providing care to others can exert a profound impact on caregivers' sense of purpose or meaning in life, thereby reciprocally influencing the caregivers' overall health and well-being. This study aims to investigate whether the sense of purpose in life moderates the association between loneliness and caregiving stress among family caregivers of people with mental health problems. METHODS: A sample of family caregivers of people with mental health problems (N = 468, 57.1 % female) drawn from the 2020 survey of the Caregiving in the U.S. was investigated. Descriptive statistics, correlation analysis, and a multiple regression with an interaction term were performed. RESULTS: Higher levels of loneliness were associated with enhanced caregiving stress. Moreover, after demographic and care-related factors were controlled for, the association between loneliness and caregiving stress was moderated by purpose in life; namely, as the sense of purpose in life increased, so did the intensity of the relationship between loneliness and caregiving stress. CONCLUSION: Reducing loneliness or strengthening the sense of purpose helps alleviate caregiving stress, and lonely family caregivers with a strong sense of purpose deserve extra attention. SN - 1532-8228 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/38734461 DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -