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Psychological, behavioural, and physical aspects of caregiver strain in autism-caregivers: a cohort study
Background
People who give care to autistic individuals (autism-caregivers) experience higher levels of caregiver strain than people who provide care for individuals with other chronic conditions (non-autism-caregivers). This places them at higher risk for psychological, behavioural and physical health concerns. The aim of this study is to delineate psychological, behavioural, and physical aspects of caregiver strain in autism-caregivers compared to non-autism-caregivers.
Methods
We included 3354 adult caregivers from the general population in the Netherlands participating in the second assessment (January, 1, 2014–December, 31, 2017) of the Lifelines Cohort. In this cohort study, using multivariable regression adjusted for age, sex, and socioeconomic status, we analysed psychological (anxiety and depression based on a Mini International Neuropsychiatric Interview, and self-reported stress and perceived health), behavioural (questionnaire...
Show moreBackground
People who give care to autistic individuals (autism-caregivers) experience higher levels of caregiver strain than people who provide care for individuals with other chronic conditions (non-autism-caregivers). This places them at higher risk for psychological, behavioural and physical health concerns. The aim of this study is to delineate psychological, behavioural, and physical aspects of caregiver strain in autism-caregivers compared to non-autism-caregivers.
Methods
We included 3354 adult caregivers from the general population in the Netherlands participating in the second assessment (January, 1, 2014–December, 31, 2017) of the Lifelines Cohort. In this cohort study, using multivariable regression adjusted for age, sex, and socioeconomic status, we analysed psychological (anxiety and depression based on a Mini International Neuropsychiatric Interview, and self-reported stress and perceived health), behavioural (questionnaire-assessed physical activity, alcohol use, and smoking), and physical aspects (body mass index, waist circumference, and leukocyte-counts) of caregiver strain in autism-caregivers (n = 722) compared with non-autism-caregivers (n = 2632).
Findings
Autism-caregivers reported more stress (OR 3.61, 95% CI 2.60–4.99). Both anxiety (OR 1.85, 95% CI 1.37–2.49) and depressive disorders (OR 1.83, 95% CI 1.17–2.86) were more common in autism-caregivers than in non-autism-caregivers. Perceived health, physical activity, alcohol use, and smoking were not different between autism- and non-autism-caregivers. In autism-caregivers, lymphocyte- and monocyte-counts were lower than in non-autism-caregivers.
Interpretation
In this large cohort, autism-caregivers had worse psychological health than non-autism-caregivers. Moreover, autism-caregiving might be associated with an altered immune balance. These findings underline the higher caregiver strain in autism-caregivers compared to other caregivers. This calls for increased support to autism-caregivers.
- All authors
- Warreman, E.B.; Lloyd, S.E.; Nooteboom, L.A.; Leenen, P.J.M.; Terry, M.B.; Hoek, H.W.; Rossum, E.F.C.V.; Vermeiren, R.R.J.M.; Ester, W.A.
- Date
- 2023-09-20
- Journal
- EClinicalMedicine
- Volume
- 64