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Family Carers of People with Dementia in Japan, Spain, and the UK: A Cross-Cultural Comparison of the Relationships between Experiential Avoidance, Cognitive Fusion, and Carer Depression

APA Citation

Kishita, N., Morimoto, H., Márquez-González, M., Barrera-Caballero, S., Vara-García, C., Van Hout, E., Contreras, M., & Losada-Baltar, A. (2022). Family carers of people with dementia in Japan, Spain, and the UK: A cross-cultural comparison of the relationships between experiential avoidance, cognitive fusion, and carer depression. Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry and Neurology. doi:10.1177/08919887221130269

Publication Topic
ACT: Empirical
Publication Type
Article
Language
English
Keyword(s)
Caregivers, Alzheimer's disease, depression, cultural-comparison, Acceptance and Commitment Therapy
Abstract

Objective and research design This study investigated whether the relationship between experiential avoidance and carer depression is mediated by cognitive fusion using path analysis and whether this model differs between family carers from Japan, Spain, and the UK using multi-group path analysis.

Results The whole sample model (N = 745) showed a good fit to the data. The direct effect of experiential avoidance on carer depression (β = .10) and its indirect effect on carer depression through cognitive fusion (β = .15) were significant. Examined variables accounted for 45% of the variance of depression. Multi-group path analysis confirmed the same pattern of indirect path across 3 countries, while the direct path was no longer significant in Spanish and UK samples.

Conclusion These findings suggest that targeting cognitive fusion may be particularly critical in culturally diverse carers and pre-emptive efforts to reduce experiential avoidance using psychological techniques may be beneficial among family carers prone to cognitive fusion regardless of cultural differences.