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Caregiving Raises Risk of Heart Disease in Women
Feb. 12, 2003 -
Women who spend nine or more hours a week caring for an ill or
disabled spouse have an increased risk of coronary heart disease,
according to a new study.
The study shows,
however, that providing care for a disabled or ill parent, sibling or
other individual did not significantly increase the risk of heart
disease, suggesting that the caregiving commitment in these cases may
have been less burdensome or less intense.
Although many
caregivers describe their work in rewarding terms, an increasing
number of studies have begun to suggest health risks, say Ichiro
Kawachi, M.D., Ph.D., of the Harvard School of Public Health and
colleagues.
The study was
published in the February issue of the American Journal of Preventive
Medicine.
Kawachi and
colleagues collected data on caregiving and coronary heart disease
from 1992 to 1996 for 54,412 women enrolled in a long-term nurses
study. The women were 46 to 71 years old with no prior history of
heart disease. During the study period, the researchers documented 321
cases of nonfatal and fatal coronary heart disease among the nurses.
Questionnaires
filled out by the nurses tracked how many hours each woman spent in
caregiving activities each week and asked them to rate how stressful
or rewarding their caregiving experiences were.
After adjusting
for other factors such as age, body mass, exercise, smoking and
saturated fat intake and a history of high blood pressure or diabetes,
the researchers found that the risk of coronary heart disease for the
women increased with nine or more hours of caregiving per week.
The researchers
found no association between how much stress or reward from caregiving
that the nurses reported and their risk of coronary heart disease.
Despite this, the
mental distress from seeing loved ones suffer, added to the stress
from financial burdens and the pressures of juggling work with
caregiving, may have contributed to the risk of disease in
caregivers, Kawachi and colleagues say.
Caregivers may
also have less time to look after their own health and fewer
opportunities to seek social support outside their homes, both of
which might contribute to an increased risk of heart disease,
according to the researchers.
More than half of
American women will care for a sick or disabled family member at some
point during their adult lives. Women are also 1.5 times more likely
than men to perform labor-intensive and intimate care tasks, Kawachi
and colleagues note. |