Men receiving home care from spouse more likely to feel burdensome than women: study

Source: Xinhua| 2019-11-13 00:21:55|Editor: Mu Xuequan
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CHICAGO, Nov. 12 (Xinhua) -- A spouse requiring caregiving for chronic illness or a disability can create a stressful environment for married couples.

Researchers from the University of Michigan (UM) and Daegu University in South Korea found that the case is particularly so for care-receiving husbands who are vulnerable to negative exchanges with their spouses, such as criticizing or letting them down, due to guilty feelings and depression.

The researchers used data comparing three groups: couples who did not provide or receive care, couples in which husbands received care from their wives, and couples in which the wives received care from husbands. They tested for gender differences within more than 3,500 couples in which at least one spouse was older than 51 years of age.

When compared with husbands who didn't receive any care or those who provided care to their wives, care-receiving husbands showed more depressive symptoms. This may be because negative reactions from spouses cause husbands to feel that they are a burden.

For caregiving husbands, their work didn't moderate the association between negative exchanges with spouses and depressive symptoms.

"Because spousal caregiving is not a traditional role for husbands, caregiving husbands often receive affirmation" when doing the work, as well as praise from others, said Minyoung Kwak of Daegu University, the study's lead author.

Among wives, there were no significant differences in the effect of negative exchanges with husbands on the wives' depressive symptoms across care status.

The negative exchanges with husbands are similar for wives regardless of whether or not they are in a caregiving relationship, the study showed.

"Due to wives' long-standing patterns of providing care in the family throughout the marriages, spousal care may not generate significant differences in exacerbating inequitable relationships among wives," Kwak said.

That is, caregiving wives are less susceptible to the adverse effects of negative social exchanges with husbands than non-caregiving or care-receiving wives because they have already experienced and practiced caregiving duties in their marriage.

The study, posted on UM's website on Monday, has been published in the current issue of the Journal of Social Personal Relationships.

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