Mapping the Caregiver Experience: Predicting Dimensions of Caregiver Strain Through Task-Based Profiles
Author(s)
Brady, Samantha; Ashebir, Sophia; D’Ambrosio, Lisa; Balmuth, Alexa; Felts, Adam; Lee, Chaiwoo; ... Show more Show less
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Objective: Family caregiving is a prevalent, diverse, and often challenging experience. We develop caregiving activity profiles to better understand how sets of care-tasks contribute to various aspects of strain.
Methods: Using diary data from a survey of 213 family caregivers in the U.S., we perform latent class analysis to group commonly occurring care-related tasks into activity profiles. We then use these classifications to predict physical, financial, and emotional strain.
Main Findings: We identified 4 unique activity profiles based on a set of 36 daily caregiving activities performed. Activity profiles varied significantly across the three analyzed strain dimensions.
Conclusion: Activity profiles present opportunities to better understand how caregiving tasks are related to specific types kinds of caregiving strain.
Date issued
2026-01Department
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Center for Transportation & Logistics; AgeLab (Massachusetts Institute of Technology); Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Urban Studies and PlanningJournal
Research on Aging
Publisher
SAGE Publications
Citation
Brady, S., Ashebir, S., D’Ambrosio, L., Balmuth, A., Felts, A., & Lee, C. (2026). Mapping the Caregiver Experience: Predicting Dimensions of Caregiver Strain Through Task-Based Profiles. Research on Aging, 48(1), 3-14.
Version: Final published version