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Health, well‐being, and social support in older Australian lesbian and gay care‐givers

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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Health, well‐being, and social support in older Australian lesbian and gay care‐givers. / Alba, Beatrice; Lyons, Anthony; Waling, Andrea et al.
In: Health & Social Care in the Community, 01.12.2019.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Alba, B, Lyons, A, Waling, A, Minichiello, V, Hughes, M, Barrett, C, Fredriksen‐Goldsen, K & Edmonds, S 2019, 'Health, well‐being, and social support in older Australian lesbian and gay care‐givers', Health & Social Care in the Community. https://doi.org/10.1111/hsc.12854

APA

Alba, B., Lyons, A., Waling, A., Minichiello, V., Hughes, M., Barrett, C., Fredriksen‐Goldsen, K., & Edmonds, S. (2019). Health, well‐being, and social support in older Australian lesbian and gay care‐givers. Health & Social Care in the Community. https://doi.org/10.1111/hsc.12854

Vancouver

Alba B, Lyons A, Waling A, Minichiello V, Hughes M, Barrett C et al. Health, well‐being, and social support in older Australian lesbian and gay care‐givers. Health & Social Care in the Community. 2019 Dec 1. Epub 2019 Sept 13. doi: 10.1111/hsc.12854

Author

Alba, Beatrice ; Lyons, Anthony ; Waling, Andrea et al. / Health, well‐being, and social support in older Australian lesbian and gay care‐givers. In: Health & Social Care in the Community. 2019.

Bibtex

@article{fe557d54c0fb4c6fbc024aaa1754cdb2,
title = "Health, well‐being, and social support in older Australian lesbian and gay care‐givers",
abstract = "Informal care-givers play an important role in society, and many of the people who provide this care are lesbian women and gay men. Being a care-giver is known to be associated with poorer health and well-being, and lesbian and gay care-givers report experiences of stigma and discrimination in the care-giving context. This study involved a survey of 230 lesbian women and 503 gay men aged 60 years and over living in Australia, of which 218 were care-givers. We compared care-givers to non-caregivers on a range of health and well-being measures, including psychological distress, positive mental health, physical health and social support. While we found no significant differences between these two groups, we further compared care-givers who were caring for an LGBTI person to those who were caring for a non-LGBTI person. Among the lesbian women, care-givers of an LGBTI person reported feeling less supported in their carer role and reported lower levels of social support more generally. They were also lower on positive mental health and physical health indicators. Among the gay men, care-givers of an LGBTI person also reported feeling less supported in their carer role, but there were no differences in reported levels of social support more generally or health and well-being compared to those caring for a non-LGBTI person. Overall, results from this study suggest that older lesbian and gay care-givers may be facing some challenges related to their well-being and feeling supported, especially if they are caring for another LGBTI person.",
author = "Beatrice Alba and Anthony Lyons and Andrea Waling and Victor Minichiello and Mark Hughes and Catherine Barrett and Karen Fredriksen‐Goldsen and Samantha Edmonds",
year = "2019",
month = dec,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1111/hsc.12854",
language = "English",
journal = "Health & Social Care in the Community",
issn = "0966-0410",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Health, well‐being, and social support in older Australian lesbian and gay care‐givers

AU - Alba, Beatrice

AU - Lyons, Anthony

AU - Waling, Andrea

AU - Minichiello, Victor

AU - Hughes, Mark

AU - Barrett, Catherine

AU - Fredriksen‐Goldsen, Karen

AU - Edmonds, Samantha

PY - 2019/12/1

Y1 - 2019/12/1

N2 - Informal care-givers play an important role in society, and many of the people who provide this care are lesbian women and gay men. Being a care-giver is known to be associated with poorer health and well-being, and lesbian and gay care-givers report experiences of stigma and discrimination in the care-giving context. This study involved a survey of 230 lesbian women and 503 gay men aged 60 years and over living in Australia, of which 218 were care-givers. We compared care-givers to non-caregivers on a range of health and well-being measures, including psychological distress, positive mental health, physical health and social support. While we found no significant differences between these two groups, we further compared care-givers who were caring for an LGBTI person to those who were caring for a non-LGBTI person. Among the lesbian women, care-givers of an LGBTI person reported feeling less supported in their carer role and reported lower levels of social support more generally. They were also lower on positive mental health and physical health indicators. Among the gay men, care-givers of an LGBTI person also reported feeling less supported in their carer role, but there were no differences in reported levels of social support more generally or health and well-being compared to those caring for a non-LGBTI person. Overall, results from this study suggest that older lesbian and gay care-givers may be facing some challenges related to their well-being and feeling supported, especially if they are caring for another LGBTI person.

AB - Informal care-givers play an important role in society, and many of the people who provide this care are lesbian women and gay men. Being a care-giver is known to be associated with poorer health and well-being, and lesbian and gay care-givers report experiences of stigma and discrimination in the care-giving context. This study involved a survey of 230 lesbian women and 503 gay men aged 60 years and over living in Australia, of which 218 were care-givers. We compared care-givers to non-caregivers on a range of health and well-being measures, including psychological distress, positive mental health, physical health and social support. While we found no significant differences between these two groups, we further compared care-givers who were caring for an LGBTI person to those who were caring for a non-LGBTI person. Among the lesbian women, care-givers of an LGBTI person reported feeling less supported in their carer role and reported lower levels of social support more generally. They were also lower on positive mental health and physical health indicators. Among the gay men, care-givers of an LGBTI person also reported feeling less supported in their carer role, but there were no differences in reported levels of social support more generally or health and well-being compared to those caring for a non-LGBTI person. Overall, results from this study suggest that older lesbian and gay care-givers may be facing some challenges related to their well-being and feeling supported, especially if they are caring for another LGBTI person.

U2 - 10.1111/hsc.12854

DO - 10.1111/hsc.12854

M3 - Journal article

JO - Health & Social Care in the Community

JF - Health & Social Care in the Community

SN - 0966-0410

ER -