Psychology and Family Caregiving
Journal Title: Psychology and Cognitive Sciences - Open Journal - Year 2016, Vol 2, Issue 2
Abstract
The term in-home family caregiver is used to describe a person who provides care and assistance (without pay) to a family member or close friend who has a disability, chronic condition or illness and is in need of help with daily living (e.g. walking, eating, bathing) and nursing (e.g. taking medication, monitoring of overall health and attending medical appointments) whilst living at home.1 Available research suggests that in-home family caregivers are reported to provide around 90% of long-term care2 and the majority of adults who care for a disabled family member are at least initially employed in the paid labor force.3
Authors and Affiliations
Aspa Sarris
Deprivation or Interest-Type Curiosity and Exploratory Behaviour in Humans: Are they Inherently Cognitive and Implicate Curiosity-Induced Teaching?
The human cognitive architecture appears to be designed to resist uncertainty and doubt. In any new experience that appears to be incongruous to what one is already familiar with, the discrepancy sets into motion the des...
Who are Better at Evaluating Faculty Teaching Peers or Students?
In any Comprehensive Faculty Evaluation System it is important to define the broad range of roles that faculty must play in order to be successful. It is also important to identify the sources of information necessary to...
Expected Agreement Coefficient for Norm-Referenced Tests With Classical Test Theory
There are two types of agreement coefficients for psychological test scores: norm-referenced and criterion-referenced agreement coefficients. These coefficients were derived within the framework of generalizability theor...
Psychological Pleasure in Reading and Visual Cognition Under Colour Luminance: A Psycholinguistic Approach
Purpose: To investigate the psychological pleasure of reading and visual cognition under two colour luminance. Methods: A comparative study of sixty participants with emmetropia and no history of ocular pathology was con...
Evidence-Based Social Work Interventions to Improve Client Attendance in Rural Mental Health: An Overview of Literature
A patient’s unwillingness to adhere to scheduled appointment affects the patient, the clinic, and the community. Several barriers have been identified that increases the no-show rates among patients. While the rates of n...