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Rethinking the Applied: Public Gerontology, Global Responsibility
Gavin J. Andrews*
and
Tara Muzumdar
McMaster University, Ontario, Canada
* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: andrews{at}mcmaster.ca.
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Abstract |
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This study explores whether religiosity explains racial differences in caregiving burden for a rural sample of dementia family caregivers. Data are from a probability sample of 74 non-Hispanic White and 67 African American dementia caregivers in rural Alabama. SPSS macros for estimating indirect effects in multiple mediator models are used to test the mediation effects of religiosity. White caregivers report higher burden, are less likely to use religious coping, and less likely to engage in organized religion than do African American caregivers. Church attendance is found to significantly (B = –.57, p < .05) mediate the racial differences on caregiving burden (R2 .07). Religious involvement in general, and church attendance in particular, seem to provide both spiritual and social psychological benefits to dementia caregivers. Thus, supplementing formal services with the services provided by religious organizations may be important in rural areas where formal resources are scarce.
First published on August 20, 2009 Journal of Applied Gerontology 2009, doi:10.1177/0733464809343110

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