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American Journal of Alzheimer's Disease and Other Dementias®, Vol. 14, No. 6, 343-350 (1999)
DOI: 10.1177/153331759901400609

A social cognitive examination of responses to family conflicts by Arfican-American and Chinese-American carrgivers

Patricia Flynn Weitzman, PhD

Yeon Kyung Chee, PhD

Sue E. Levkoff, ScD

Division on Aging, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts

Conflict between caregivers and their family members has been examined in relation to caregiver burden. However, specific theoretical models have not been applied to analyses of caregiver family conflicts. Nor has there been much research on the family conflicts of ethnic minority caregivers. Using Selman's1 interpersonal conflict strategies and their related levels of social perspective coordination as our framework, we content analyzed conflict reports of African-American and Chinese-American caregivers. Overall, there were more similarities in the strategies and social perspective coordination levels of the two groups than differences. In narratives where conflict was present (78 percent), about half of caregivers in both groups reported higherlevel conflict strategies, and half reported lower-level strategies. More advanced social perspective coordination seemed associated with greater satisfaction with family sharing of responsibilities in both groups. If these data patterns bear up under further testing, training in conflict resolution and social perspective coordination skills may prove an effective means of fostering better social relationships and sharing arrangements between caregivers and family members, and be a worthwhile complement to existing stress reduction interventions for caregivers.


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