Abstract

To examine race differences in psychosocial and psychophysiological responses to family caregiving. Participants completed paper-and-pencil surveys and were exposed to a laboratory-based interpersonal challenge that included a period of rest, an interpersonal challenge, and a period of recovery. A university research laboratory. Sixteen Caucasian and 12 African-American postmenopausal (64 +/- 10 years) women who were caregivers to a family member with dementia. Psychosocial functioning included self-reported perceived stress, caregiver burden, social support, and caregiving meaning. Systolic and diastolic blood pressure (SBP, DBP) and heart rate (HR) were measured every two minutes during the rest, challenge, and recovery. Salivary cortisol was measured at rest and 15-minutes post-challenge. There was a Race x Task interaction for SBP and HR but not DBP reactivity. African-American women showed greater reactivity than Caucasian women. The magnitude of this interaction was large. African-American women also reported greater caregiving from meaning than Caucasian women. In contrast, significantly more African Americans (58%) than Caucasians (14%) showed cortisol reactivity from rest to 15-minutes post-challenge. The differential pattern of physiologic responses is consistent with studies outside of the caregiving literature, and suggests that caregiving may be perceived as more effortful among Caucasian women and less controllable among African-American women.

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