Abstract

ABSTRACT This article investigates whether being a caregiver of an elderly parent and the caregiver's involvement in multiple roles increases distress in middle-aged women. Previous studies assumed that providing care to frail parents causes distress in women, in particular when they have other social roles as well. Longitudinal data were collected within a cohort of middle-aged women (n = 934; n = 743). The acquisition or loss of the caregiver role did not appear to affect levels of distress of middle-aged women, nor did additional roles of caregivers increase distress levels or caregiver role strain. Most distressed were women not performing any major social role, suggesting that the lack of social roles rather than the multiplicity of roles is associated with distress. The caregiver role might even reduce distress when women have very few other roles. Findings are explained in terms of the role scarcity, the role expansion and role accumulation hypotheses of role theory.

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