Recent work in emotions and emotion management suggests that humor is a social phenomenon and serves an important purpose in interaction. That is, humor can be viewed as interpersonal emotion management, whose purpose is to manage the emotions of others as well as of the self. This article offers the following definition as an analytical tool: humor as emotion management is an expert cultural performance; which strengthens or restores the feeling norms of the situation and creates amusement in the self and others; generating positive sentiments among members of an interacting group by bonding them and/or reducing an external threat; often at the expense of some excluded person(s), event(s), or object(s).
Findings demonstrate that caregiver relationship quality with family and with HCP are important factors in understanding caregiver burden during the early treatment phase of late-stage cancer care.
Our overall aim is to develop an emotionally intelligent cognitive assistant
(ICA) to help older adults with Alzheimer's disease (AD) to complete activities
of daily living more independently. For improved adoption, such a system should
take into account how individuals feel about who they are. This paper
investigates different affective identities found in older care home residents
with AD, leading to a computational characterization of these aspects and, thus,
tailored prompts to each specific individual's identity in a way that
potentially ensures smoother and more effective uptake and response. We report
on a set of qualitative interviews with 12 older adult care home residents and
caregivers. The interview covered life domains (family, origin, occupation,
etc.), and feelings related to the ICA. All interviews were transcribed and
analyzed to extract a set of affective identities, coded according to the
social–psychological principles of affect control theory (ACT). Preliminary
results show that a set of identities can be extracted for each participant
(e.g. father, husband). Furthermore, our results provide support for the
proposition that, while identities grounded in memories fade as a person loses
their memory, habitual aspects of identity that reflect the overall “persona”
may persist longer, even without situational context.
Purpose
This study drew on life course theory to argue that the strains of cancer caregiving and bereavement are modified by the age of the patient. We expected that caregivers of middle-aged patients would be more distressed than caregivers of older patients.
Methods
This panel study conducted 199 interviews with family caregivers of advanced cancer patients; first following diagnosis and again shortly after the patient’s death.
Results
Among caregivers of middle-aged patients (40–59), grief mediated the relationship between baseline caregiving and bereavement depressed mood, with grief increasing risk of depression in bereavement. Among caregivers of young-old patients (60–79), grief had a suppressor effect on the relationship between caregiving and bereavement depressed mood, showing greater distress during caregiving than at bereavement.
Conclusions
Caregiving for middle-aged cancer patients may increase the risk for severe grief and depression, whereas caregivers of young-old cancer patients appeared to experience relief at bereavement. After bereavement, continued observation may be warranted for caregivers of a middle-aged patient; grief, added to the ongoing demands of their lives (which may include those left behind by a middle-aged patient), may put such caregivers at risk for greater psychological and emotional distress.
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