Caregiving and mental health among workers: Longitudinal evidence from a large cohort of adults in Thailand

Date

2016-12

Authors

Yiengprugsawan, Vasoontara
Leach, Liana
Berecki-Gisolf, Janneke
Kendig, Hal
Harley, David
Seubsman, Sam-Ang
Sleigh, Adrian

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Elsevier

Abstract

BACKGROUND As people in middle and lower income countries live longer, more people become sick, disabled, and frail and the demand for family caregiving grows. Thailand faces such challenges. This study investigates the relationship between caregiving and mental health among workers drawn from a large longitudinal cohort of Thai adults. METHODS Participants were drawn from the Thai Health-Risk Transition Study, a cohort study since 2005 of distance-learning adult Open University students residing nationwide. Caregiving status and binary psychological distress outcome (score 19-30 on Kessler 6) were recorded in 2009 and 2013 among cohort members who were paid workers at both years (n=33,972). Multivariate logistic regression was used to estimate the relationship between four-year longitudinal caregiving status and psychological distress in 2013, adjusting for potential covariates. RESULTS Longitudinal analyses revealed the transitional nature of care with 25% exiting and 10% entering the caring role during the four-year follow-up. Based on multivariate logistic regression, 2009-2013 caregiving status was significantly associated with psychological distress. Cohort members transitioning into caregiving and those who were caregivers in both 2009 and 2013 had a higher risk for psychological distress than non-caregivers (Adjusted Odds Ratios 1.40 [1.02-1.96] and 1.64 [1.16-2.33], respectively). CONCLUSION Our findings provide evidence on caregiving and associated risk for psychological distress among working Thais. This adds to the limited existing literature in middle-income countries and highlights the potential pressure among caregivers in balancing work and care while preserving their own mental health.

Description

Keywords

caregivers, carers, cohort study, longitudinal data, mental health, Thailand, work and health

Citation

Source

SSM - population health

Type

Journal article

Book Title

Entity type

Access Statement

Open Access

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Restricted until