TL;DR
A UK study reveals that older individuals who care for someone for 50 hours or more weekly face accelerated cognitive decline. In contrast, caring for just five to nine hours a week can enhance brain health.
The stresses and strains of caring for someone for 50 hours or more a week leads to “accelerated cognitive decline” in middle-aged and older people, research shows.
However, providing care for only five to nine hours a week has the opposite effect, boosting brain health so much that the benefits last until older age.
Carers UK called the findings “extremely worrying” and said they highlight how long hours spent providing care raises the risk of social isolation and burnout.
Dr Baowen Xue, an academic at University College London and the lead author of the paper, said: “Our study shows that the caring responsibilities many people take on in later life can be a double-edged sword.
“On the one hand, lighter caring responsibilities can be good for you by providing mental stimulation from interacting with loved ones or others you’re helping and a sense of purpose and usefulness.
“But being overloaded with caring tasks has exactly the opposite effect and can accelerate people’s mental decline in terms of not being as mentally sharp or quick-thinking as they used to be.”
Researchers compared the cognitive health of 2,765 carers aged 50 or over with that of 2,765 non-carers the same age who are part of the English Longitudinal Study on Ageing. They focused in particular on their executive function – such as their ability to make decisions and juggle competing tasks – and their memory. Participants were 60 years old on average and women comprised 56% of the group.
The paper, published in the journal Age and Ageing, said: “Taking on manageable levels of caregiving may provide cognitively stimulating activities and coordinating care that helps maintain executive function in later life.
“Providing a few hours of support outside the household may help caregivers maintain their cognitive health as they age.”
In contrast, though, “carers providing 50+ hours of care a week exhibited accelerated cognitive decline, indicating that the cognitive stimulation associated with caring is overshadowed by the demands of high-intensity care”, the researchers wrote.
People who care for such long hours are usually full-time carers who as a result have little opportunity to work or enjoy a social life, they point out. “The intensity of such care may lead to feelings of loneliness and disrupt sleep, further compounding its negative effects on cognition.”
The UK’s last census in 2021 found that 5.8 million people provide unpaid care and that 1.7 million of them do so for at least 50 hours a week.
Just over half of all carers have increased the amount of time they provide care, according to Carers UK research last year.