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Dynamic functional brain network connectivity during pseudoword processing relates to children’s reading skill
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“Our Brokenness Kind of Connects Us”: Exploring Social Justice Topics Through Read-Alouds in a Ninth-Grade Classroom
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Increased connectivity among sensory and motor regions during visual and audiovisual speech perception
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In: Open Access Publications (2022)
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Using Young Adult fiction to interrogate raciolinguistic ideologies in schools
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Cushing, I; Carter, A. - : John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of United Kingdom Literacy Association, 2021
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Silver Girls: A Modern Retelling of Little Women
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In: Honors Program Theses and Projects (2021)
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White matter disconnectivity fingerprints causally linked to dissociated forms of alexia
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In: ISSN: 2399-3642 ; Communications Biology ; https://hal.umontpellier.fr/hal-03634907 ; Communications Biology, Nature Publishing Group, 2021, 4 (1), pp.1413. ⟨10.1038/s42003-021-02943-z⟩ (2021)
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Drug induced stuttering: pharmacovigilance data ; Drug induced stuttering: pharmacovigilance data.
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In: ISSN: 1474-0338 ; EISSN: 1744-764X ; Expert Opinion on Drug Safety ; https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-03474488 ; Expert Opinion on Drug Safety, Informa Healthcare, 2021, 20 (3), pp.373-378. ⟨10.1080/14740338.2021.1867101⟩ (2021)
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The New Face of Caregiving: Multidimensional Factors of Caregiver Burden Among Young Adult Caregivers
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Abstract:
As the older adult population increases in the United States, more young adults will become family caregivers. This study examines the multidimensional factors associated with caregiver burden among young adult caregivers aged 18-34 years old caring for a loved one aged 50 and over. The theory of Emerging Adulthood reinforces the importance of studying young adult caregivers. The theory illustrates how young adults are at a “critical developmental stage” of identity exploration in “love, work and worldviews” and adding on the role of caregiving could be particularly challenging compared to older generations of caregivers (Arnett, 2000 p. 469). The Stress Process Model explores the socio-demographic factors, primary stressors and secondary stressors of young adult caregivers aged 18-34 years old compared to caregivers over the age of 35 years old using the National Alliance for Caregiving and AARP’s 2015 Caregiving in the U.S. nationally representative survey data (n = 1,228). The data were collected through randomly selected online interviews among adults aged 18 and older. Hierarchical multiple linear regression analysis revealed that increasing instrumental activities of daily living and younger age of the caregiver was associated with an increase in young adult's caregiver burden. Findings also revealed that instrumental younger caregivers, race, activities of daily living caregivers, activities of daily living of the caregivers, caregiving hours per week, being unemployed, workplace impacts and care recipient’s with Alzheimer’s disease were related to higher caregiver burden among caregivers over the age of 35 years old. Interactions effects also showed a statistically significant difference between caregivers 18-34 years old and caregivers 35 and over in ADLs with caregiver burden. This shows that the average effect of ADLs on caregiver burden depends on the age of the caregiver. For caregivers 35 and over, the higher the number of ADLs the higher the level of caregiver burden, whereas caregivers 18-34 years old with the same number of ADLs as caregivers 35 and over had lower caregiver burden. No other significant interactions were found with caregiver age and caregiver burden.The findings show that young adult caregivers need tailored policies, programs and practices to assist with instrumental activities of daily living. In addition, younger age contributed to caregiver burden among caregivers aged 18-34 years old and therefore more programs and policies should be aimed towards younger caregivers within the millennial cohort.
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Keyword:
Alzheimer's disease; Caregiver Burden; Caregiving; Gerontology; Older Adults; Social work; Stress Process Model; Young Adult Caregiving
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URL: https://escholarship.org/uc/item/6ng8p46f
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Parental Perceptions and Decisions Regarding Maintaining Bilingualism in Autism. ...
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Age-related differences in the neural bases of phonological and semantic processes in the context of task-irrelevant information.
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Influence of encoding difficulty, word frequency, and phonological regularity on age differences in word naming.
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Infant and Toddler Child-Care Quality and Stability in Relation to Proximal and Distal Academic and Social Outcomes.
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Age-related differences in the neural bases of phonological and semantic processes.
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Age-related differences in resolving semantic and phonological competition during receptive language tasks.
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Predictive Neural Computations Support Spoken Word Recognition: Evidence from MEG and Competitor Priming. ...
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Expanding and Explaining Parent-Preferences in Other-Oriented Decision-Making During Late Adolescence and Young Adulthood ...
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Expanding and Explaining Parent-Preferences in Other-Oriented Decision-Making During Late Adolescence and Young Adulthood ...
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Validation of the Portuguese version of the Evidence-Based Practice Questionnaire
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Predictive Neural Computations Support Spoken Word Recognition: Evidence from MEG and Competitor Priming.
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