Gender differences in caregiving among family - caregivers of people with mental illnesses
Post Graduate Institute of Medical Education and Research · Creative Research Enterprises (United States)
Abstract
All over the world women are the predominant providers of informal care for family members with chronic medical conditions or disabilities, including the elderly and adults with mental illnesses. It has been suggested that there are several societal and cultural demands on women to adopt the role of a family-caregiver. Stress-coping theories propose that women are more likely to be exposed to caregiving stressors, and are likely to perceive, report and cope with these stressors differently from men. Many studies, which have examined gender differences among family-caregivers of people with mental illnesses, have concluded that women spend more time in providing care and carry out personal-care tasks more often…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 41.44
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 124
Authors
3- NSNidhi Sharma
Post Graduate Institute of Medical Education and Research, Creative Research Enterprises (United States)
- SCSubho ChakrabartiCorresponding
Creative Research Enterprises (United States), Post Graduate Institute of Medical Education and Research
- SGSandeep Grover
Creative Research Enterprises (United States), Post Graduate Institute of Medical Education and Research
Topics & keywords
- Stressor
- Coping (psychology)
- Distress
- Caregiver stress
- Mental health
- Caregiver burden
- Psychology
- Social support