| Literature DB >> 35798995 |
Ludmila Fleitas Alfonzo1, Ankur Singh2, George Disney3, Jennifer Ervin3, Tania King3.
Abstract
PURPOSE: This systematic review aims to assess and evaluate quantitative evidence on the association between informal caregiving and mental health in young people.Entities:
Keywords: Adolescent; Caregiver; Child; Mental health; Youth
Year: 2022 PMID: 35798995 PMCID: PMC9263065 DOI: 10.1007/s00127-022-02333-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Soc Psychiatry Psychiatr Epidemiol ISSN: 0933-7954 Impact factor: 4.519
Search strategy
| STEP 1 | |
|---|---|
| Tier 1 | Tier 2 |
| Terms related to young carers | Terms related to mental health |
| Young carer* or young caregiver* or caregiving youth or young caregiver* or young adult carer* or young adult caregiver* or young adult caregiver* or child carer* or child caregiver* or child care giver* | Mental health or psychological* or depressi* or depression or anxiety or anxiety disorders or Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic or Posttraumatic Stress Disorder or Post traumatic Stress Disorder or Post-traumatic Stress Disorder or Stress, Psychological or Stress or Psychological Stress |
*Tier 1 and 2 were restricted to titles
Fig. 1PRISMA flow diagram
Descriptive summary of included studies and main findings
| First author (publication year) | Country | Study design | Analytical sample | Mental health outcomes | Main findings | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nakanishi (2022) | UK | Longitudinal | 3927 | Participants were classified as informal carers if they provided support to someone ill, with a disability or an elderly person within or outside their households. Participants were asked to exclude paid caregiving | Mental health was measured using the Kessler Distress Scale (K6) Mental well-being was measured with the Warwick–Edinburgh Mental Well-being Scale | Psychological distress was higher among caregivers during the first wave of the COVID-19 pandemic, with a change of 0.60 (95%CI 0.07, 1.13) in K6 scores Mental well-being was lower among young carers with a − 0.30 (95%CI − 0.67, 0.08) difference in Warwick–Edinburgh Mental Well-being scores as compared to non-carers |
| Wepf (2021) | Sweden | Cross-sectional | 2525 | Young carers were categorised as such if a person close to them “needed support due to an illness, mental health problems, disabilities, old age, addiction or injuries” and provided substantial support with domestic, personal, emotional or administrative tasks in the past six months. Non-carers were classified into non-carers with and without family health problems | Mental well-being was measured using the Warwick–Edinburgh Mental Well-being Scale | Non-caring was associated with higher levels of well-being, with an increase of 0.75 among non-carers with family health problems and a 1.75 increase on non-carers with healthy families, with young carers as the reference group |
| King (2021) | Australia | Longitudinal | 2165 | Participants were categorised as caregivers if they provided help to someone with a long-term condition, a disability or an elderly in the past six months. Volunteer activities and paid work were excluded. Caring status was categorised as carers and non-carers. Caregiving extent was categorised as no caring, less than daily caring and daily caring | Mental health status was measured using the Kessler Psychological Distress Scale (K10) | Providing informal care at ages 14/15 years was associated with greater psychological distress at 17/18 years, with an average treatment effect of 1.10 (95%CI 0.37, 1.83). A dose–response relationship was evident. When compared to non-carers, adolescents caring daily displayed an increase of 1.94 in Kessler Psychological Distress scores (95%: 0.48, 3.39), while those caring less than daily showed a 0.83 change (95%CI:0.06, 1.61) |
| Brimblecombe (2020) | UK | Longitudinal | All carersa: 6866, new carersb: 4067 young adults (16–25 years old) | Participants were categorised as young carers if they reported providing care for someone sick, with a disability, or elderly family member within or outside the household. Formal carers (paid and voluntary) were excluded. New carers were defined as those who started caring in 2014/2016 | Mental health status was measured using the Mental Health Component Score (MCS) from the Short-form 12 Health Survey | Young carers, in all carers group, had poorer mental health, with a difference of − 2.75 in mean MCS (95%CI − 4.32, − 1.17) as compared to non-carers Among new carers, the mental health effects (ATE) of young caregiving were small, with a MCS coefficient of − 1.47 (95%CI − 3.77, 0.83) |
| Robison (2020) | Scotland | Cross-sectional | 11,215 adolescents and young adults (11–18 years old) | Young carers were identified by asking participants if someone in their family household had a disability, long-term illness, drug/alcohol problem or mental health problem and if they looked after or cared for this person | Self-reported mental health problems were assessed by asking pupils whether they had a mental health/emotional illness | Young carers were more likely to report mental health problems (OR:1.35, 95%CI 1.11, 1.64) than non-carers |
| Haughland (2020) | Norway | Cross-sectional | 40,205 young adults (18–25 years old) | Caring status was defined as providing regular care for someone with physical or mental illness, disabilities, or substance misuse. Caring recipient could be a parent, sibling, another relative or a friend Hours of care: defined as hours spent caring for someone (not their child/children) in a regular weekday and weekend/holidays | Symptoms of anxiety and depression were assessed using the Hopkins Symptoms checklist (HSCL-25) | Young women carers were more likely to present w Additional analyses showed small to moderate effect sizes of young caring on anxiety and depression for both men and women (ES:0.33 for 1 h or less and ES = 0.54 for 2 h or more) |
| Lakman (2019) | Canada | Cross-sectional | 248 children, adolescents, and young adults (8–18 + years) | Young caregivers attending community agencies | A modified version of the Centre for Epidemiological Studies-Depression Scale (CES-D) was used to assess depressive symptoms Social anxiety: was measured using an adapted version of the Social Anxiety Scale for children-Revised | Effect sizes (Cohen’s d) for depression were large (ES:0.74), with young carers reporting a higher frequency of depressive symptoms (t (100): 3.68, There were very small differences in social anxiety levels, F (3, 244): 1.95, |
| Tseliou (2018) | Northern Ireland | Cross-sectional | 433,328 children, adolescents, and young adults (5–24 years) | Participants were asked if they provided care for someone with a long-term condition (physical, mental ill-health or disability) or problems related to old age. Responses categories included non-caregiver, caregiving for 1–19 h per week, 20–49 h per week, ≥ 50 h per week | Participants were classified as having chronic mental health problem if reporting an | Associations between young caregiving and chronic mental health differed by age. For younger participants (5–17 years old), caregiving was associated to increased odds of chronic mental health problems with a clear dose–response gradient, OR: 1.98 (95%CI 1.51, 2.59) for those caring 1–19 h per week and OR: 2.46 (95%CI 1.70, 3.56) for those caring for 20 h or more. Odds of chronic mental health problems in young adult carers were also increased with ORs of 1.34 (95%CI 1.17, 1.53) and 1.37 (95%CI 1.17, 1.61) for those caring 1–19 h and over 20 h, respectively |
| Greene (2017) | US | Cross-sectional | 353 young adults (18–24 years) | Participants were asked if they were “providing assistance to a person who needs special medical care as a result of an injury, ageing, illness, disability, or other health condition” | Depression was measured using the Centre for Epidemiological Studies-Depression Scale (CES-D) Anxiety was assessed using the State Trait Anxiety Inventory (STAI) | Moderate effect sizes for the association between young caregiving and depression were reported (ES = 0.45) The effect size was also moderate for state anxiety (ES = 0.44) and small for trait anxiety (ES = 0.35) |
| Pakenham (2006) | Australia | Cross-sectional | 245 children, adolescents, and young adults (10–24 years) | Participants were asked if they had parent with an illness/disability | Depression and anxiety were assessed using the Brief Symptom Inventory (BSI-18) | Carers and non-carers did not differ on depression and anxiety scores (measure of effect not reported) |
aAll carers at the start of follow-up
bRestricted to non-carers at the beginning of follow-up
Risk of bias of non-randomised studies of exposures (ROBINS-E)