Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Research has also linked the provision of social support within intimate relationships to enhanced relationship satisfaction for the care recipient and caregiver. [ 2 ] [ 27 ] [ 54 ] For example, higher levels of support in newlywed couples predicted higher relationship satisfaction two years later. [ 55 ]
The caregiver's relationship with the patient pre and post cancer diagnosis has been shown to impact bereavement adjustment. Depression and PTSD can be a greater concern for caregivers with unresolved tensions with their loved one, whereas stronger bonds during the palliative phase seems to be related to a healthier transition into bereavement ...
The "patient" is the infant–caregiver relationship. The main goal of CPP treatment is to support the parent-child relationship in order to strengthen cognitive, social, behavioral, and psychological functioning. [8] CPP is delivered in one 1–1.5-hour session per week for a year, with both the child and the caregiver/s. [8]
Romantic relationships, for example, serve as a secure base that help people face the surprises, opportunities, and challenges life presents. Similarities such as these led Hazan and Shaver to extend attachment theory to adult relationships. Relationships between adults also differ in some ways from relationships between children and caregivers ...
She is a clinical health psychologist specializing in psychoneuroimmunology and Director of the Ohio State Institute for Behavioral Medicine Research. [2] [3] Her research on stress associated with caregiving and marital relationships has been featured in The New York Times, [4] [5] [6] The Wall Street Journal, [7] [8] and many other news outlets.
Studies support that secure attachments with primary caregivers lead to more mature and less aggressive children than those with avoidant or ambivalent attachment styles. [8] The relationship type infants establish with their primary caregiver can predict the course of their relationships and connections throughout their lives.
Poor relationships have a negative impact on health outcomes. In 1985, Cohen and Wills presented two models that have been employed to describe this connection: the main effect model and the stress-buffering model. [2] The main effect model postulates that our social networks influence our psychology (our affect) and our physiology (biological ...
The concept of caregiver burden was introduced in the 1960s, distinguishing between objective and subjective aspects of caregiving. Objective burden arises from specific caregiving tasks, while subjective burden typically stems from the emotional strain caused by the excessive demands and potential embarrassment associated with caring for recipients.