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Stress and burnout amongst professional carers of people with intellectual disability: another health inequity.

Curr Opin Psychiatry. 2006 Sep;19(5):502-7.
Stress and burnout amongst professional carers of people with intellectual disability: another health inequity.
White P, Edwards N, Townsend-White C.
Mental Health Policy and Economics Group, Queensland Centre for Mental Health Research (QCMHR), Centre for Mental Health, The Park, Wacol, Queensland, Australia. Paul_White@health.qld.gov.au

PURPOSE OF REVIEW: This paper summarizes trends in the research literature about stress and burnout in the lives of people who are the professional carers of people with intellectual disability. The principal time period considered was from 2004 to 2006. RECENT FINDINGS: Studies reviewed here focus on several themes including inequities affecting professional carers of people with intellectual disability and the possible effects of some models of care on inequities. Implications for people with intellectual disability are also considered. SUMMARY: The diaspora of people with intellectual disability into the community and their accompanying services found a whole new set of unpredicted and unprecedented challenges. Life in the community has rendered professional carers of people with intellectual disability more clearly vulnerable to stress and burnout for a variety of complex reasons, some identified and others as yet unrecognized. Lack of support and lack of role definition are particular problems. Presence of physical and mental health inequities result in major disparities in community care for people with intellectual disability.

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