%0 Journal Article %J Journal of Aging and Health %D 2020 %T Till death do us part: Intersecting health and spousal dementia caregiving on caregiver mortality. %A Amanda N Leggett %A Amanda Sonnega %A Matthew C. Lohman %K Caregiving %K Cognitive Ability %K End of life decisions %K Marriage %X

OBJECTIVE: We consider whether it is the healthiest dementia caregivers who experience a mortality benefit and whether a protective association is consistent for leading causes of mortality.

METHOD: Using the Health and Retirement study (2000-2012), Cox survival models predict time to death for dementia caregivers, including an interaction between dementia caregiver status and self-rated health. The nationally representative sample consisted of 10,650 married adults aged 51 or older (917 dementia caregivers).

RESULTS: A significant interaction between dementia caregiver status and self-rated health suggested that relative to noncaregivers, dementia caregivers had reduced mortality, with this effect particularly strong at lower levels of self-rated health. The protective effect of dementia caregiver status was consistent across death by heart disease, cancer, and cerebrovascular disease.

DISCUSSION: These findings add to a growing body of literature suggesting that caregiving may provide a mortality benefit and a reason to maintain health.

%B Journal of Aging and Health %V 32 %P 871-879 %G eng %N 7-8 %R 10.1177/0898264319860975