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INTRODUCTION: How care-related time and emotional health over the day differ for those assisting older adults with and without dementia is unclear. METHODS: Using 2134 time diaries from the National Study of Caregiving, we compared emotional health and care time for caregivers of older adults with and without dementia. RESULTS: Caregivers to older adults with dementia experienced worse (higher scores) on a composite measure of negative emotional health (4.2 vs 3.3; P < .05) and provided more physical/medical care (33.7 vs 16.2 minutes; P < .05) and less transportation assistance (12.6 vs 24.8 minutes; P < .05) than other caregivers. In models, providing physical/medical care was associated with worse emotional health (β = 0.15; P < .01) and socializing with the care recipient was associated with worse emotional health when the recipient had dementia (β = 0.28; P < .01). DISCUSSION: Findings highlight the opportunity for targeted interventions to address the emotional consequences of different types of care time in the context of dementia.
Freedman et al. (Tue,) studied this question.