Association of Stress-Health Factors among Parkinson's Disease Patient/Caregiving-Partner Dyads

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Abstract

Objective: Few studies have explored the shared effects of Parkinson's disease (PD) within patient/caregiver dyads. To fill this gap, we compared stress-health outcomes of patients with those of caregiving-partners, examined individual stress-health associations, and explored stress-health associations within dyads. Method: A total of 18 PD patient/caregiving-partner dyads (N = 36) reported on disease-specific distress, anxiety, quality of life (QOL), and provided saliva samples for cortisol assessment. This cross-sectional, secondary analysis of a prospective pilot study used Actor-Partner Interdependence Models to test aims. Results: Patients reported greater anxiety, poorer QOL, and demonstrated flatter cortisol slopes and higher mean bedtime cortisol compared to caregiving-partners. Both patients and caregiving-partners with greater anxiety had elevated bedtime cortisol and poorer QOL. Greater disease-specific distress in an individual was associated with higher diurnal mean cortisol in their partner. Conclusions: Findings highlight the potential for psychosocial interventions at the dyadic level to reduce shared burden and promote coping among PD patient/caregiving-partner dyads.

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Phillips, K. M., Siwik, C., Rodgers, A., Salmon, P., Litvan, I., Jablonski, M. E., … Sephton, S. E. (2022). Association of Stress-Health Factors among Parkinson’s Disease Patient/Caregiving-Partner Dyads. Archives of Clinical Neuropsychology, 37(1), 12–18. https://doi.org/10.1093/arclin/acab024

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