본문

Race/Ethnicity, Caregiving and the Health of US Women
Race/Ethnicity, Caregiving and the Health of US Women
Race/Ethnicity, Caregiving and the Health of US Women

상세정보

자료유형  
 학위논문 서양
최종처리일시  
20250211153035
ISBN  
9798346873372
DDC  
301
저자명  
Goodwin, Andrea N.
서명/저자  
Race/Ethnicity, Caregiving and the Health of US Women
발행사항  
[Sl] : The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 2024
발행사항  
Ann Arbor : ProQuest Dissertations & Theses, 2024
형태사항  
189 p
주기사항  
Source: Dissertations Abstracts International, Volume: 86-06, Section: B.
주기사항  
Advisor: Hummer, Robert A.
학위논문주기  
Thesis (Ph.D.)--The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 2024.
초록/해제  
요약There are multifaceted responses to the varied stressors associated with "caregiver burden," the stress or strain individuals experience due to the challenges of caregiving. And previous research has shown that race is associated with health consequences of stress in the United States, in which stress manifests physically in individuals of color and mentally in White individuals. Women account for 60-70 percent of the 48 million Americans providing unpaid care to an adult with health or functional needs, and they are at two times greater risk than men to experience high caregiver burden. Thus, this project focuses on women to assess if there are disparities in the health among caregivers in different racial/ethnic groups in the United States. With consideration for the extent these disparities are affected by the sociodemographic and economic characteristics of the caregivers, this dissertation examines if racial/ethnic disparities are patterned differently for physical, mental, and general health.Both cross-sectional and longitudinal data are used in this dissertation to examine racial/ethnic health disparities among US women who are caregivers to an older adult. The first chapter, presents analysis of the mental, physical, and general health of caregiving women across three different racial/ethnic groups. The second chapter focuses on "sandwich caregivers" (those caring for an older adult and dependent children simultaneously), with regards to racial/ethnic disparities in mental, physical, and general health in these subgroups of caregivers. The health of sandwich caregivers is examined in comparison to their counterparts in other racial/ethnic groups, as well as their same race/ethnicity non-sandwich caregivers. The third chapter utilizes longitudinal data to observe if there are racial/ethnic disparities in changes in mental, physical, and general health of caregiving women over time. Collectively, the three analytic chapters provide a thorough examination of racial/ethnic disparities in health among caregiving women in the United States.Consistent with previous sociology of health literature, caregiving women display differential health consequences of stress processing. Black/African American caregiving women exhibited physical health inequities and their White counterparts displayed mental health detriments. Hispanic/Latina caregiving women displayed better physical health than the referent group of White caregivers, in multiple models, particularly when socioeconomic factors were included in analysis. In addition to socioeconomic factors, caregiving environment, care recipient characteristics, and social support/health services utilization show observable associations with the health of caregiving women in the United States, and should be taken into consideration with regards to policymaking.
일반주제명  
Sociology
일반주제명  
Public health
일반주제명  
Womens studies
키워드  
Caregiving
키워드  
Health disparities
키워드  
Race/ethnicity
키워드  
Women
기타저자  
The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Sociology
기본자료저록  
Dissertations Abstracts International. 86-06B.
전자적 위치 및 접속  
로그인 후 원문을 볼 수 있습니다.

MARC

 008250123s2024        us                              c    eng  d
■001000017164719
■00520250211153035
■006m          o    d                
■007cr#unu||||||||
■020    ▼a9798346873372
■035    ▼a(MiAaPQ)AAI31637672
■040    ▼aMiAaPQ▼cMiAaPQ
■0820  ▼a301
■1001  ▼aGoodwin,  Andrea  N.
■24510▼aRace/Ethnicity,  Caregiving  and  the  Health  of  US  Women
■260    ▼a[Sl]▼bThe  University  of  North  Carolina  at  Chapel  Hill▼c2024
■260  1▼aAnn  Arbor▼bProQuest  Dissertations  &  Theses▼c2024
■300    ▼a189  p
■500    ▼aSource:  Dissertations  Abstracts  International,  Volume:  86-06,  Section:  B.
■500    ▼aAdvisor:  Hummer,  Robert  A.
■5021  ▼aThesis  (Ph.D.)--The  University  of  North  Carolina  at  Chapel  Hill,  2024.
■520    ▼aThere  are  multifaceted  responses  to  the  varied  stressors  associated  with  "caregiver  burden,"  the  stress  or  strain  individuals  experience  due  to  the  challenges  of  caregiving.  And  previous  research  has  shown  that  race  is  associated  with  health  consequences  of  stress  in  the  United  States,  in  which  stress  manifests  physically  in  individuals  of  color  and  mentally  in  White  individuals.  Women  account  for  60-70  percent  of  the  48  million  Americans  providing  unpaid  care  to  an  adult  with  health  or  functional  needs,  and  they  are  at  two  times  greater  risk  than  men  to  experience  high  caregiver  burden.  Thus,  this  project  focuses  on  women  to  assess  if  there  are  disparities  in  the  health  among  caregivers  in  different  racial/ethnic  groups  in  the  United  States.  With  consideration  for  the  extent  these  disparities  are  affected  by  the  sociodemographic  and  economic  characteristics  of  the  caregivers,  this  dissertation  examines  if  racial/ethnic  disparities  are  patterned  differently  for  physical,  mental,  and  general  health.Both  cross-sectional  and  longitudinal  data  are  used  in  this  dissertation  to  examine  racial/ethnic  health  disparities  among  US  women  who  are  caregivers  to  an  older  adult.  The  first  chapter,  presents  analysis  of  the  mental,  physical,  and  general  health  of  caregiving  women  across  three  different  racial/ethnic  groups.  The  second  chapter  focuses  on  "sandwich  caregivers"  (those  caring  for  an  older  adult  and  dependent  children  simultaneously),  with  regards  to  racial/ethnic  disparities  in  mental,  physical,  and  general  health  in  these  subgroups  of  caregivers.  The  health  of  sandwich  caregivers  is  examined  in  comparison  to  their  counterparts  in  other  racial/ethnic  groups,  as  well  as  their  same  race/ethnicity  non-sandwich  caregivers.  The  third  chapter  utilizes  longitudinal  data  to  observe  if  there  are  racial/ethnic  disparities  in  changes  in  mental,  physical,  and  general  health  of  caregiving  women  over  time.  Collectively,  the  three  analytic  chapters  provide  a  thorough  examination  of  racial/ethnic  disparities  in  health  among  caregiving  women  in  the  United  States.Consistent  with  previous  sociology  of  health  literature,  caregiving  women  display  differential  health  consequences  of  stress  processing.  Black/African  American  caregiving  women  exhibited  physical  health  inequities  and  their  White  counterparts  displayed  mental  health  detriments.  Hispanic/Latina  caregiving  women  displayed  better  physical  health  than  the  referent  group  of  White  caregivers,  in  multiple  models,  particularly  when  socioeconomic  factors  were  included  in  analysis.  In  addition  to  socioeconomic  factors,  caregiving  environment,  care  recipient  characteristics,  and  social  support/health  services  utilization  show  observable  associations  with  the  health  of  caregiving  women  in  the  United  States,  and  should  be  taken  into  consideration  with  regards  to  policymaking.
■590    ▼aSchool  code:  0153.
■650  4▼aSociology
■650  4▼aPublic  health
■650  4▼aWomens  studies
■653    ▼aCaregiving
■653    ▼aHealth  disparities
■653    ▼aRace/ethnicity
■653    ▼aWomen
■690    ▼a0626
■690    ▼a0573
■690    ▼a0453
■71020▼aThe  University  of  North  Carolina  at  Chapel  Hill▼bSociology.
■7730  ▼tDissertations  Abstracts  International▼g86-06B.
■790    ▼a0153
■791    ▼aPh.D.
■792    ▼a2024
■793    ▼aEnglish
■85640▼uhttp://www.riss.kr/pdu/ddodLink.do?id=T17164719▼nKERIS▼z이  자료의  원문은  한국교육학술정보원에서  제공합니다.

미리보기

내보내기

chatGPT토론

Ai 추천 관련 도서


    신착도서 더보기
    최근 3년간 통계입니다.

    소장정보

    • 예약
    • 소재불명신고
    • 나의폴더
    • 우선정리요청
    • 비도서대출신청
    • 야간 도서대출신청
    소장자료
    등록번호 청구기호 소장처 대출가능여부 대출정보
    TF11726 전자도서 대출가능 마이폴더 부재도서신고 비도서대출신청 야간 도서대출신청

    * 대출중인 자료에 한하여 예약이 가능합니다. 예약을 원하시면 예약버튼을 클릭하십시오.

    해당 도서를 다른 이용자가 함께 대출한 도서

    관련 인기도서

    로그인 후 이용 가능합니다.