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Degree of Rurality is Not Related to Dementia Caregiver Distress, Burden, and Coping in a Predominantly Rural Sample

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Journal of Applied Gerontology

Published online on

Abstract

Earlier research suggests that geographic location matters for informal caregivers of persons with dementia: rural caregivers tend to rely on more informal supports and may report more psychological distress and burden than urban caregivers. Differential access to services may underlie these findings, but degree of rurality is typically measured with population size. In contrast, the current article measured degree of rurality with standardized scale of access to metropolitan centers. In a large sample we found nonsignificant and trivial associations between metropolitan access with self-reported caregiver distress, (N = 272; Brief Symptom Inventory), burden (N = 234; Zarit Burden Interview), and coping (n = 46; Jalowiec Coping Scale). The null findings were likely related to the use of a proxy variable for dementia-related caregiver supports (i.e., degree of access to metropolitan centers). In future research, direct measures of access to appropriate dementia related services should be used to study caregiver outcomes.