What factors affect the mental health and well-being of middle-aged male carers?
Although males constitute a substantial proportion of carers until recently there has been little focus on the impact of caring on their mental well-being. This study aimed to examine the extent to which a variety of contextual, caring related and protective factors predicted the mental well-being o...
Main Author: | |
---|---|
Other Authors: | |
Published: |
University of Surrey
2018
|
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.759520 |
id |
ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-759520 |
---|---|
record_format |
oai_dc |
spelling |
ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-7595202019-03-05T15:40:44ZWhat factors affect the mental health and well-being of middle-aged male carers?Warrell-Phillips, SarahMorison, Linda2018Although males constitute a substantial proportion of carers until recently there has been little focus on the impact of caring on their mental well-being. This study aimed to examine the extent to which a variety of contextual, caring related and protective factors predicted the mental well-being of middle-aged male carers informed by Pearlin’s Stress Process Model. The study used secondary data from the Understanding Society study. Cross-sectional analysis of how factors relating to the role of caring, interferences of caring on employment and social participation and leisure predict mental well-being measured by the GHQ-12 was undertaken. Longitudinal analysis following those that became carers and potential changes in social participation, satisfaction with leisure and mental well-being was also undertaken. Data from 8,063 middle-aged men (1,612 carers and 6,451 non-carers) was used for the cross-sectional element and data from 4,665 (614 carers and 4,051 non-carers) was used for the longitudinal element. An estimated 20% of middle-aged men were carers. Carers had significantly poorer mental well-being (p = 0.014), measured by their scores on the GHQ-12, compared to non-carers but the difference was very small (η2 = 0.001). At the cross-sectional level, three predictors were identified to most strongly impact mental well-being: subjective financial status; satisfaction with leisure time; and employment status (partial eta squared = 0.053; 0.046; 0.051 respectively). Longitudinal analysis suggested that carers’ mental well-being was poorest prior to undertaking caring. However, there was no evidence that mental well-being became worse for those that became carers relative to those who remained non-carers. Middle-aged male carers who were under financial stress, unable to pursue leisure activities and unemployed or long term sick were found to be particularly vulnerable to poorer mental well-being. Providing support to this group of middle-aged men both in practical and therapeutic terms would help meet their mental well-being needs.150University of Surrey10.15126/thesis.00849109https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.759520http://epubs.surrey.ac.uk/849109/Electronic Thesis or Dissertation |
collection |
NDLTD |
sources |
NDLTD |
topic |
150 |
spellingShingle |
150 Warrell-Phillips, Sarah What factors affect the mental health and well-being of middle-aged male carers? |
description |
Although males constitute a substantial proportion of carers until recently there has been little focus on the impact of caring on their mental well-being. This study aimed to examine the extent to which a variety of contextual, caring related and protective factors predicted the mental well-being of middle-aged male carers informed by Pearlin’s Stress Process Model. The study used secondary data from the Understanding Society study. Cross-sectional analysis of how factors relating to the role of caring, interferences of caring on employment and social participation and leisure predict mental well-being measured by the GHQ-12 was undertaken. Longitudinal analysis following those that became carers and potential changes in social participation, satisfaction with leisure and mental well-being was also undertaken. Data from 8,063 middle-aged men (1,612 carers and 6,451 non-carers) was used for the cross-sectional element and data from 4,665 (614 carers and 4,051 non-carers) was used for the longitudinal element. An estimated 20% of middle-aged men were carers. Carers had significantly poorer mental well-being (p = 0.014), measured by their scores on the GHQ-12, compared to non-carers but the difference was very small (η2 = 0.001). At the cross-sectional level, three predictors were identified to most strongly impact mental well-being: subjective financial status; satisfaction with leisure time; and employment status (partial eta squared = 0.053; 0.046; 0.051 respectively). Longitudinal analysis suggested that carers’ mental well-being was poorest prior to undertaking caring. However, there was no evidence that mental well-being became worse for those that became carers relative to those who remained non-carers. Middle-aged male carers who were under financial stress, unable to pursue leisure activities and unemployed or long term sick were found to be particularly vulnerable to poorer mental well-being. Providing support to this group of middle-aged men both in practical and therapeutic terms would help meet their mental well-being needs. |
author2 |
Morison, Linda |
author_facet |
Morison, Linda Warrell-Phillips, Sarah |
author |
Warrell-Phillips, Sarah |
author_sort |
Warrell-Phillips, Sarah |
title |
What factors affect the mental health and well-being of middle-aged male carers? |
title_short |
What factors affect the mental health and well-being of middle-aged male carers? |
title_full |
What factors affect the mental health and well-being of middle-aged male carers? |
title_fullStr |
What factors affect the mental health and well-being of middle-aged male carers? |
title_full_unstemmed |
What factors affect the mental health and well-being of middle-aged male carers? |
title_sort |
what factors affect the mental health and well-being of middle-aged male carers? |
publisher |
University of Surrey |
publishDate |
2018 |
url |
https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.759520 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT warrellphillipssarah whatfactorsaffectthementalhealthandwellbeingofmiddleagedmalecarers |
_version_ |
1718996061635215360 |