Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Caregiving as Work: A Qualitative Study of Dementia Caregiving Among Mexican American Families Using SEIPS 3.0

View through CrossRef
Background: Informal dementia caregiving constitutes a substantial yet underrecognized form of work that places significant demands on family caregivers. Mexican American families, who experience disproportionate dementia burden and structural barriers to care, often rely on intensive family-based caregiving. While prior research has examined cultural values, stigma, and resource barriers separately, less attention has been paid to how these factors interact within a work system to shape caregiver burden. Objective: We characterized informal dementia caregiving among Mexican American families as work performed within a sociotechnical system, and examined how work system components interact to shape caregiver outcomes using the Systems Engineering Initiative for Patient Safety (SEIPS) 3.0 framework. Methods: We conducted semi-structured interviews with 15 Mexican American dementia caregivers in a U.S.-Mexico border community. Using constructivist grounded theory, we analyzed informal caregiving as work embedded within everyday contexts through the SEIPS 3.0 lens. Analysis examined interactions among person characteristics, caregiving tasks, organizational supports, tools and resources, and the broader cultural and linguistic environment. Findings : Caregiving labor was sustained by strong cultural commitment but its structure limited delegation and support access. Cultural beliefs framing care as a non-delegable family responsibility, stigma inhibiting disclosure, demanding physical and emotional labor, language barriers restricting organizational access, and uneven distribution of care within families collectively imposed burden on individual family members, most often daughters or wives. Caregivers actively sought information and resources, yet system-level barriers constrained utilization. These interacting conditions produced predictable outcomes: exhaustion, declining health, and burnout. Conclusions: Viewing dementia caregiving as work clarifies why relationally meaningful care becomes unsustainable without supportive systems. Caregiver burden emerges from interactions within the caregiving work system rather than isolated cultural or individual factors. This perspective highlights stigma reduction and language-concordant services as key intervention leverage points through system-level approaches that sustain family caregiving without relying on individual endurance.
Title: Caregiving as Work: A Qualitative Study of Dementia Caregiving Among Mexican American Families Using SEIPS 3.0
Description:
Background: Informal dementia caregiving constitutes a substantial yet underrecognized form of work that places significant demands on family caregivers.
Mexican American families, who experience disproportionate dementia burden and structural barriers to care, often rely on intensive family-based caregiving.
While prior research has examined cultural values, stigma, and resource barriers separately, less attention has been paid to how these factors interact within a work system to shape caregiver burden.
Objective: We characterized informal dementia caregiving among Mexican American families as work performed within a sociotechnical system, and examined how work system components interact to shape caregiver outcomes using the Systems Engineering Initiative for Patient Safety (SEIPS) 3.
0 framework.
Methods: We conducted semi-structured interviews with 15 Mexican American dementia caregivers in a U.
S.
-Mexico border community.
Using constructivist grounded theory, we analyzed informal caregiving as work embedded within everyday contexts through the SEIPS 3.
0 lens.
Analysis examined interactions among person characteristics, caregiving tasks, organizational supports, tools and resources, and the broader cultural and linguistic environment.
Findings : Caregiving labor was sustained by strong cultural commitment but its structure limited delegation and support access.
Cultural beliefs framing care as a non-delegable family responsibility, stigma inhibiting disclosure, demanding physical and emotional labor, language barriers restricting organizational access, and uneven distribution of care within families collectively imposed burden on individual family members, most often daughters or wives.
Caregivers actively sought information and resources, yet system-level barriers constrained utilization.
These interacting conditions produced predictable outcomes: exhaustion, declining health, and burnout.
Conclusions: Viewing dementia caregiving as work clarifies why relationally meaningful care becomes unsustainable without supportive systems.
Caregiver burden emerges from interactions within the caregiving work system rather than isolated cultural or individual factors.
This perspective highlights stigma reduction and language-concordant services as key intervention leverage points through system-level approaches that sustain family caregiving without relying on individual endurance.

Related Results

Family Pediatrics
Family Pediatrics
ABSTRACT/EXECUTIVE SUMMARYWhy a Task Force on the Family?The practice of pediatrics is unique among medical specialties in many ways, among which is the nearly certain presence of ...
How Dementia Stages Influence the Impact of Stressors and Caregiving Appraisals on Caregiver Well-being
How Dementia Stages Influence the Impact of Stressors and Caregiving Appraisals on Caregiver Well-being
This study investigates the influence of dementia stages on the relationship between caregiving stressors, appraisals, and caregiver well-being. A total of 300 caregivers of indivi...
Understanding the knowledge and attitudes to dementia in Sub‐Saharan Africa: A systematic review
Understanding the knowledge and attitudes to dementia in Sub‐Saharan Africa: A systematic review
AbstractBackgroundA direct result of an ageing population is an increase in the prevalence of chronic non‐communicable diseases such as dementia. Creating dementia awareness and pr...
Leveraging Clinical Notes and Natural Language Processing for Dementia Detection (Preprint)
Leveraging Clinical Notes and Natural Language Processing for Dementia Detection (Preprint)
BACKGROUND Routinely collected data (e.g. coded hospital data, clinical notes) are widely being used to develop dementia prevalence estimates. This is limit...
Translating ‘dementia friends’ programme to undergraduate medical and nursing practice: a qualitative exploration
Translating ‘dementia friends’ programme to undergraduate medical and nursing practice: a qualitative exploration
Abstract Introduction Dementia awareness is a key priority of medical and nursing pre-registration education. The ‘dementia friends’ programme is an...
Prescription Patterns of Anti-dementia and Psychotropic Drugs in People Living With Dementia in China
Prescription Patterns of Anti-dementia and Psychotropic Drugs in People Living With Dementia in China
Abstract Pharmacotherapy of dementia is a critical intervention for managing symptoms of and slowing progression of dementia. However, evidence on prescribing patter...
Dementia Subtypes: A Study From Dementia Clinic In A Referral Neuroscience Hospital, Bangladesh
Dementia Subtypes: A Study From Dementia Clinic In A Referral Neuroscience Hospital, Bangladesh
Background: Dementia is one of the major causes of disability and dependency among older people globally but still it is not explored very well in most parts of the world particula...
ENGAGE-DEM : a model of engagement of people with dementia
ENGAGE-DEM : a model of engagement of people with dementia
Dementia is a neurodegenerative disease that affects cognition, producing a reduction in thinking, problem-solving, and mnemonic abilities, functioning, preventing affected people ...

Back to Top