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Original Articles

Social Support and Self-Rated Health of African American Women Informal Caregivers: Urban and Rural Differences

ORCID Icon &
Pages 16-30
Received 21 Apr 2017
Accepted 10 Oct 2017
Accepted author version posted online: 23 Oct 2017
Published online: 21 Nov 2017

ABSTRACT

In this study, we examined how geographic location might differently influence social support and self-rated health for rural and urban African American women caregivers. We used cross-sectional data from 253 urban and 263 rural women primary caregivers. Controlling for key demographic factors, we regressed caregivers’ self-rated health on social engagement, structural, and functional aspects of social support for urban and rural caregivers separately. The perception of family functioning was positively associated with urban and rural caregivers’ self-rated health. Urban caregivers reported having significantly more contact with their family and more informal helpers compared to rural caregivers. Furthermore, church attendance, a measure of social engagement, was significant for urban caregivers’ self-rated health, but not rural caregivers. Our findings affirmed the importance of foregrounding context and disaggregating social support, and point to the need for interventions targeting family functioning and paying attention to geographic location.

Acknowledgments

This study would not be possible without data from the original study, the Black Rural and Urban Caregivers Mental Health and Functioning Study. As such, the authors would like to thank Dr. Letha Chadiha, the Principal Investigator, for permission to use the dataset and her feedback on the manuscript. The National Institute on Aging and the Office of Research for Women’s Health funded the original study (RO1 AG 15962).

Funding

The original study (Black Rural and Urban Caregivers Mental Health and Functioning Study) was funded by a grant from the National Institute on Aging and the Office of Research for Women’s Health (R01 AG15962, PI: Letha A. Chadiha). Our study used data collected from that study.

Additional information

Funding

This work was supported by the National Institute of Aging and the Office of Research for Women’s Health [RO1 AG 15962)].

Notes on contributors

Philip A. Rozario

Philip A. Rozario’s interest focuses on the well-being of older adults and their families. His evolving research agenda includes productive aging, late-life identity, African American family caregivers’ well-being, and the impact of family responsibility policy on social work practice and late life well-being in Singapore.

Gaynell M. Simpson

Gaynell M. Simpson is an assistant professor of social work and a faculty research associate in the Center for Mental Health and Aging at the University of Alabama. As a RCMAR scholar, her interests include African American female caregiving roles, mental and physical health disparities, and social support.

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