2017
DOI: 10.1037/rep0000148
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College-age adults’ religiosity, family functioning and values, and willingness to provide care for a relative with a chronic health condition.

Abstract: The current study findings suggest religiosity, family functioning, and family values play a role in willingness to provide care, and thus, future researchers should target these constructs for intervention-based studies. (PsycINFO Database Record

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Cited by 10 publications
(11 citation statements)
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“…Parveen, Morrison, & Robinson, 2014 ) or of willingness to care amongst people who have not yet been caregivers but with an assumption that they will likely care for a family member in the future (e.g. Goldberg-Looney, Perrin, Morlett-Paredes, & Mickens, 2017 ). A further related notion is that of willingness to care again , which refers to past caregivers, i.e.…”
Section: Willingness To Provide Carementioning
confidence: 99%
See 2 more Smart Citations
“…Parveen, Morrison, & Robinson, 2014 ) or of willingness to care amongst people who have not yet been caregivers but with an assumption that they will likely care for a family member in the future (e.g. Goldberg-Looney, Perrin, Morlett-Paredes, & Mickens, 2017 ). A further related notion is that of willingness to care again , which refers to past caregivers, i.e.…”
Section: Willingness To Provide Carementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Where the Theory of Planned Behaviour has been utilised in studies of willingness and motivations to provide care (e.g. Goldberg-Looney et al, 2017 ; Katz, Gur-Yaish, & Lowenstein, 2010 ), it has been assumed that personal attitudes and subjective norms (of caregiving behaviours) influence behavioural intentions, but not the reverse. Evidence on the relationship of motivations (operationalised mainly as filial norms) to actual caregiving behaviour appears ambiguous: with some evidence that filial motivations play a role in the amount of help provided (e.g.…”
Section: Willingness To Provide Carementioning
confidence: 99%
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“…On the other hand, familismo could allow a PD caregiver within a Latin American family to perceive their role as less burdensome than someone without that cultural value 38 . In the same vein, a study of college‐aged adults demonstrated that family functioning (ie, family dynamics) did not directly predict willingness to care for a family member; however, family dynamics indirectly predicted willingness to care through family values 39 . Therefore, cultural family values may contribute to the relationship between family dynamics and caregiver outcomes for PD caregivers.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Familism, a strong attachment and loyalty among members of the same family, is often described as an antecedent to caregiver willingness 17,30,32,39,40 . Spousal or partner caregivers frequently report a positive quality to the relationship, including love and affection, an emotional connection, and marital satisfaction as reasons for their willingness to be a caregiver 17,27,28,32,32,36,37 .…”
Section: Antecedentsmentioning
confidence: 99%