Title: Addressing Family Caregiver Needs
1Addressing Family Caregiver Needs
- Presented by
- Jane Vujovich
- Aging and Adult Services
- MN Department of Human Services
- 2004
2DHSs Position Stronger Support for Family
Caregivers..making an investment
- Informal caregivers are critical to our current
long-term care system, providing 80 of all
long-term care support - Need to support and expand this valuable resource
base - Supporting informal caregivers is a critical
public investment
3Minnesotas Caregiver Support System
- Vision to build capacity that affects lives by
improving the quality and duration of the care
provided by family or informal caregivers - Impact keeps older adults living in the
community longer and reduces LTC expenditures for
facility-based care - Funding Streams
- Administration of federal and providers
4MNs Spending for Family Caregivers
- Federal 2.4 million
- State 879,969
- Local/Private 444,834
- In-kind 855,500
52005 Statewide Key Development Priorities for
Publicly Funded CG Services
- Expanded formal, quasi-formal, and informal
respite options across genders, age groups,
cultures, working caregivers within
education/support - Consumer-directed models
- Broad integration of technology-based supports
- Integration of caregiver coach/consultant service
- Expanding resources and linkages with health care
professionals for stronger chronic care management
6Family Caregivers
- Approximately 44 million CGs in USA
- 25 U.S. households (22.9 million)
- Unpaid extension of health and LTC system valued
at 257 billion annually - -NAC, AARP (2004)
7Family Caregivers
- 61 female and 39 male
- Typical Profile 46 y.o. Baby Boomer working
woman spending 18 hours weekly caring for 77 y.o.
mother - NAC, AARP (2004)
8Family Caregivers
- Average duration of caregiving 4.5 years
- Average annual income 35,000
- With children ltage 18 at home 37
- Working full or part time 59
9Family Caregivers
- 18-34 years 26 (?mental illness)
- 35-49 years 32
- 50-64 years 30
- 65 years 13
- (NAC, AARP, April 2004)
10 Impact of Caregiving
- Physical /Mental Health Problems 15
- Emotionally Stressed 25
- Leisure and social activities 50
- 51 less time friends and family
- 44 give up vacations, hobbies, social activities
- 26 less exercise
- -NAC, AARP (2004)
11Financial Impact of Caregiving
- 54 of non-spousal caregivers spend about 171
out of pocket monthly for 15-75,000 incomes - Level 5 CG burden spending 324/mo
- Primary caregiver spending 232/mo
- CGs 65 yrs spending 217/mo
- Greater hardship with higher level of burden, no
choice in role, low income
12Impact on Working Caregivers
- Most caregivers work (48FT11PT)
- 57 tardy or leave early or time off
- 17 LOA
- 10 went from FT to PT
- 6 had to quit
- 5 lost benefits
- 4 gave up promotions
- (NAC, AARP, April 2004)
13How are caregivers helping?
- IADLS (transportation, groceries, errands,
housework, finances, meals, medications,
arranging services) - Personal cares (mobility, dressing, bathing,
toileting, feeding) - Supervision
- Home modifications and assistive devices
- Arranging, attending, advocating medical care,
insurance coverage, and other services - Community integration, socialization, emotional
well-being - Future planning activities
14Intensity of Caregiving
- 8 hours or less per week 48
- 9-20 hours per week 23
- 21-39 hour per week 8
- 40 hours or more 17
- -NAC, AARP (2004)
15Unmet Needs
- Finding time for oneself (35)
- Keeping person safe (29)
- Balancing work and family (29)
- Managing emotional and physical stress (29)
- Finding activities to do with person (27)
- Help talking with health care professionals (22)
- Making end of life decisions (20)
16Where do caregivers turn for help?
- Internet for information on diseases and services
- Health care professionals
- Faith-based organizations
- Community services and counties
- Workplace
17What caregivers are most likely to use help?
- 58 CGs of someone with Alzheimers Disease or
dementia - Co-reside with care recipient
- ages 50 vs. age 18-34 years
- Living in urban areas
- Level 5 Burden caregivers
18Getting Results for Caregivers -- what do they
want?
- To have the skill and knowledge to provide the
care - To stay healthy and continue their current
lifestyle - To direct the care and make informed decisions
- To provide quality care and support as long as
they can
19What Services are Caregivers Using ?
- (National)
- Financial information 25
- Formal training 18
- Transportation 18
- MOW 18
- Recreation camps 8
- Support groups 7
- ADC 5
- Respite 5
- (Minnesota) 33,023 served
- Information 80,441 calls (1.1 million)
- Access Assistance 38
- Education 43
- Counseling 9
- Respite 3
- Supplemental 6
20New Service Caregiver Coach/Consultant
- Professional service accountable to caregiver
- Goal to help the family caregiver develop their
role build skills strengthening ability to
advocate, manage, and coordinate care while
maintaining personal goals and balanced
lifestyle. - ROLE planner, counselor, educator, coach,
resource, evaluator, problem-solver, care
advisor, advocate
21Future Trends with Caregiving
- More male caregivers
- More workplace interventions
- More and different respite options
- Greater use of Internet
- More federal and state for financial
assistance to caregivers
22Summary Points
- Family caregivers are a sound public investment
- There needs to be more help for caregivers --
earlier and at their serviceable moment - The burden of caregiving encourages out of home
placement - Health and social service professionals across
systems must help to identify caregivers and
encourage them to accept the right type and
amount of help - Caregiver services will continue to evolve
23Contact Information
- Call Senior LinkAge Line _at_
1-800-333-2433 - Jane Vujovich 651-282-3803
- jane.vujovich_at_state.mn.us
- Resource Caregiving in the U.S. National
Alliance for Caregiving and AARP, April 2004