Logo

Sign in | Create an Account Cart 0
Sign In
Forgot password?
Institutional Users can Sign In here
Don't have an Account?
Create an account
 
Forgot Password
 
Thank You for Registration

Thank-you for creating an account on Longwoods.com.

As a registered user of longwoods.com you can receive the following benefits:
  • Abstracts from ALL Longwoods.com publications
  • Citation tracking and reference links to full-text articles
  • Ability to share the information through various social media outlets with a single click
  • Ability to comment on any article
  • Pay-per-View purchases of single articles or issues by credit card or paypal
  • Choice of any www.longwoods.com/newsletters delivered to your email inbox for free
  • Ability to sign up for any www.longwoods.com/events.
  • The advantage of having password access to www.Longwoods.com from any computer anywhere
Please check your e-mail and follow the instructions to activate your account. If you do not receive an e-mail, please check your junk folder.
Reset Password

Please check your e-mail and follow the instructions to reset your password.

Menu
  • Home
  • Topics
    • Access to Care
    • Aging
    • Alternative Levels of Care
    • Caregivers
    • Change Management
    • Community Care
    • COVID-19
    • Decision Making
    • Digital Health
    • Effective Teamwork
    • Equity in Healthcare
    • Governance
    • Health Human Resources
    • Health System Innovation
    • Healthcare Costs
    • Healthcare Policy
    • Healthy workplaces
    • Home Care
    • Innovations in Care
    • Leadership Development
    • Long-Term Care
    • Longwoods Healthcare Services Radio
    • Mental Health
    • Nursing Leadership
    • Pandemic Planning
    • Patient Experience
    • Patient Safety
    • Patient-Centered Care
    • Primary Care
    • Public Health
    • Quality Improvement
    • System Integration
    • Workforce Planning
  • Events
    • Longwoods Breakfast Series
    • Healthcare Rounds
    • Leadership Discussion
    • Conferences and Education
    • Healthcare Awards
  • Publications
    • Healthcare Quarterly
    • HealthcarePapers
    • Healthcare Policy
    • Nursing Leadership
    • Insights
    • Special Issues
    • White Papers
    • Longwoods Blog
    • World Health & Population
    • ElectronicHealthcare
    • Law & Governance
    • Books
  • Multimedia
    • Videos
    • Podcasts
  • Jobs
    • Longwoods Job Site
    • HR Resources Database
    • Transitions
    • Rates for Job Postings
  • Subscribe

Health & Healthcare News

Daughters caring for a parent recovering from stroke more prone to depression than sons

QUEBEC CITY, June 7 /CNW Telbec/ - Adult daughters caring for a parent recovering from stroke are more prone to depression than sons, Marina Bastawrous today told the Canadian Stroke Congress, co-hosted by the Canadian Stroke Network, the Heart and Stroke Foundation, and the Canadian Stroke Consortium.

Caring for a parent who has experienced a stroke results in a dramatic shift from the usual parent-child relationship. "Stroke can be particularly challenging for families," says Bastawrous, a masters candidate at the University of Toronto. "Taking care of elderly parents can bring out family strengths and family weaknesses."

The adult child-to-parent bond can result in excellent care when a senior has a stroke. But not always, she says.

The study found that close and secure relationships with parents predicted better mental health and greater satisfaction in adult child caregivers.

"But strained relationships before or following the stroke increases depression in daughters," she says. "If the relationship between a parent and adult daughter is already strained, a stroke can make things even worse."

The quality of relationships both before and after the stroke had an equally important influence on wellbeing.

The study found that adult daughters placed greater importance on family relationships than sons and, in turn, were more negatively impacted by poor relationships with their parent.

"When a parent has a stroke, adult children often become their primary caregivers," says Heart and Stroke Foundation spokesperson Dr. Michael Hill. "It's important that as part of the recovery process we examine their experiences because they are obviously vital to the ongoing care of the stroke patient."

Sandwich generation spread too thin

Study co-author Dr. Jill Cameron says adult children providing stroke care for their parents need help and they need it now.

"Adult children are stroke care's forgotten generation," she says. "We can't afford to leave them behind."

Sixty two percent of stroke caregivers are adult children. Yet stroke care interventions are overwhelmingly designed for spouses.

This imbalance must be addressed, says Dr. Cameron. "We need to make better use of financial resources to enhance the support provided to this growing population of caregivers."

She notes that adult children caregivers need to balance the challenges of professional life, family life, and the added responsibility of taking on the care of somebody post-stroke. "Caregivers need more support," she says. "They aren't trained but their role is essential."

To remove some of the strain - financial and emotional - innovative thinking is required.

"Our healthcare system is not sustainable in the face of rising costs," says Dr. Cameron. "We need to plan."

Here's what Dr. Cameron envisions as part of this plan:

    -   Create work environments that support family members caring for
        stroke survivors (e.g., caregiving leave).
    -   Recognizing that family members perform many caregiving duties after
        the stroke survivor returns home but receive little if any training;
        hospitals must train family members for their caregiving role.
    -   To ensure post-hospital care plans incorporate the unique
        circumstances of the family, caregivers should be recognized as
        members of the care team.

"Family caregivers are critical to stroke recovery and typically assume major care roles that are frequently costly to their financial, social, and emotional well-being," says Dr. Antoine Hakim, spokesperson for the Canadian Stroke Network. "Innovative new ideas to support their balance and quality of life is essential."

Statements and conclusions of study authors are solely those of the study authors and do not necessarily reflect Foundation or CSN policy or position. The Heart and Stroke Foundation of Canada and the Canadian Stroke Network make no representation or warranty as to their accuracy or reliability.

The Canadian Stroke Network (canadianstrokenetwork.ca) includes more than 100 of Canada's leading scientists and clinicians from 24 universities who work collaboratively on various aspects of stroke. The network, which is headquartered at the University of Ottawa, also includes partners from industry, the non-profit sector, provincial and federal governments. The Canadian Stroke Network, one of Canada's Networks of Centres of Excellence, is committed to reducing the physical, social and economic impact of stroke on the lives of individual Canadians and on society as a whole.

The Heart and Stroke Foundation (heartandstroke.ca), a volunteer-based health charity, leads in eliminating heart disease and stroke and reducing their impact through the advancement of research and its application, the promotion of healthy living, and advocacy.

-30-

For further information: and/or interviews, contact: The CSC 2010 MEDIA OFFICE (JUNE 7 and 8) at (418) 649-5232; OR contact Hémisphère Relations Publiques: Marie-José Bégin, (514) 994-0802, mj_begin@videotron.ca; France Gaignard, (514) 616-7705; Congress information and media registration is at www.strokecongress.ca; After June 8, 2010, contact: Jane-Diane Fraser, Heart and Stroke Foundation of Canada, (613) 569-4361 ext 273, jfraser@hsf.ca
 

Contact information

Contact Us
Mailing address

260 Adelaide Street East, No. 8, Toronto ON M5A 1N1

Telephone number
416-864-9667
Fax number
416-368-4443

Subscribe Today

  • Canadian Journal of Nursing Leadership

    Leadership in nursing management, practice, education and research 

Stay Connected

Newsletter
© 2026
Longwoods Publishing Corporation
  • Institutional Users
  • About Us
  • Subscription Information
  • Advertise
  • Reprints
  • Partners
  • Terms
  • Privacy