Subject Area

Psychology, Clinical, Psychology, General/Other

Abstract

With the increasing demands of the aging population, it is crucial to understand the impacts of informal caregiving (i.e., providing unpaid care to an adult with functional limitations) as more individuals take on this role. The literature on the well-being of informal caregivers is divided, with some studies reporting that caregiving is primarily harmful for the caregiver, and others concluding that caregiving is fundamentally beneficial. This study examined how positive and negative marital interactions moderate the association between caregiving time and caregiver affect in both within and between-person processes, aiming to clarify the mechanisms behind the varied outcomes observed in caregiver well-being. In the Midlife in the United States Survey (MIDUS), 212 spousal caregivers participated in an 8-day daily diary study, resulting in 1689 days of data. A daily, within-person approach captured the day-to-day fluctuations of caregivers’ experiences and emotional well-being. Multi-level modeling was employed, and covariates included caregiver health, gender, employment status, minority status, education, and time spent caring for people besides a spouse. Results indicated that daily marital strain did not significantly moderate the relationship between daily caregiving time and negative affect, while marital uplifts did, reducing the association between increased caregiving time and negative affect. Conversely, daily marital strain and uplifts did not significantly moderate the association between caregiving time and positive affect. At the between-person level, the proportion of days a caregiver experienced marital strain moderated the association between providing more care and having less positive affect. The results generally support the view that caregiving is predominantly linked with psychological burden while highlighting the potential role of daily marital uplifts in buffering this association.

Degree Date

Fall 2024

Document Type

Thesis

Degree Name

M.A.

Department

Psychology

Advisor

Stephanie Wilson, Ph.D.

Number of Pages

58

Format

.pdf

Creative Commons License

Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial 4.0 License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial 4.0 License

Available for download on Thursday, December 10, 2026

Share

COinS