Perceived technology usefulness for caregiving among unpaid caregivers: a National Cross-Sectional Study.

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Smith, Matthew Lee

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Lee, Shinduk

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Neelamegam, Malinee

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Vollmer Dahlke, Deborah

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Southerland, Jodi L

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Baker, Zachary G

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Ma, Kris Pui Kwan

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Petrovsky, Darina V

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Rahemi, Zahra

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Sefcik, Justine S

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Bacsu, Juanita-Dawne R

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Kew, Chung Lin

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Ory, Marcia G

dc.date.accessioned

2025-06-25T17:02:13Z

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2025-06-25T17:02:13Z

dc.date.issued

2025-01

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Background

Technological advancements have the potential to improve caregiving quality and alleviate caregiver burden by providing tools for real-time communication, monitoring, and care coordination. To assist with technology adoption among the 53 million unpaid caregivers nationwide, efforts are needed to better understand caregivers' perceptions about the usefulness of certain technologies for caregiving.

Methods

Data were analyzed from a national sample of 483 unpaid caregivers using an internet-delivered questionnaire. All unpaid caregivers were eligible if they provided at least 8 h of weekly care for a care recipient aged 50 years or older. The primary dependent variable was the Perceived Technology Usefulness for Caregiving (PTUC) Scale, which is a composite score of six items ranging from 0 to 100. PTUC item responses were summed and averaged, and the overall PTUC scores were transformed into statistical tertiles (higher scores indicating more perceived technology usefulness for caregiving). An ordinal regression model was fitted to identify factors associated with higher PTUC tertiles.

Results

Across tertiles, unpaid caregivers who were younger (Beta = -0.018, p = 0.030) and male (Beta = 0.422, p = 0.048) reported higher PTUC Scale scores. Compared to non-Hispanic white caregivers, Hispanic/Latino (Beta = 0.779, p = 0.010), African American (Beta = 1.064, p < 0.001), and Asian (Beta = 0.958, p = 0.010) caregivers reported higher PTUC Scale scores. Unpaid caregivers with lower financial insecurity (Beta = -0.010, p = 0.003), higher caregiver strain (Beta = 0.149, p < 0.001), and more satisfaction with the support they receive for caregiving (Beta = 0.009, p = 0.002) reported higher PTUC Scale scores. Unpaid caregivers whose care recipients had less cognitive impairment reported higher PTUC Scale scores (Beta = -0.245, p = 0.048).

Conclusion

Findings indicate caregiver characteristics, caregiving dynamics, and available resources (financial and caregiving support) are associated with perceptions about the usefulness of technology for caregiving. The utility of technology for caregiving may be higher among unpaid caregivers with more caregiver strain or positive experiences with caregiving support.
dc.identifier.issn

2296-2565

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2296-2565

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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/32514

dc.language

eng

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Frontiers Media SA

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Frontiers in public health

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10.3389/fpubh.2025.1578701

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https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0

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Humans

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Cross-Sectional Studies

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Aged

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Middle Aged

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Caregivers

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United States

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Female

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Male

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Surveys and Questionnaires

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Perceived technology usefulness for caregiving among unpaid caregivers: a National Cross-Sectional Study.

dc.type

Journal article

duke.contributor.orcid

Petrovsky, Darina V|0000-0002-3109-1633|0000-0003-1126-2287

pubs.begin-page

1578701

pubs.organisational-group

Duke

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School of Nursing

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Published

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13

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