FCA
Work and Eldercare
The 21st century will be marked by a dramatic increase in the size of the older
population as the baby boom generation ages. An increase in older adults will mark
a corresponding increase in dementing illnesses such as Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's
disease and stroke. These disorders affect not only the individual, but can also
be devastating to the family. Already, millions of working adults are juggling the
competing demands of caring for a chronically ill or disabled parent, raising a
family, and managing a career.
If you are a caregiver, you are not alone. An estimated one out of four U.S. households
is involved in caring for a loved one aged 50 or older. As many as 12.8 million
Americans of all ages need assistance from others to carry out everyday activities.
While there is no reliable estimate of the number of family caregivers, at least
7 million Americans are caring for a parent at any given time.
Between one-third to one-half of all caregivers are also employed outside the home.
Working caregivers sacrifice leisure time, and often suffer stress-related illnesses.
Negative effects on working caregivers include time lost from work, lower productivity,
quitting a job to give care, lost career opportunities and lower future earnings.
Eventually, some 12 percent quit their jobs to provide care full-time. Work disruptions
due to employee caregiving responsibilities result in productivity losses of $1,
142 per year per employee. In California, this translates to more than $1 billion—$2
billion if part-time employees are included.
Getting Started
A range of community resources exist to help caregivers and their impaired loved
ones. The arrangements can be informal (e.g., your family, friends and neighbors)
or formal (service agencies and programs). In assessing your family's needs consider
the following:
- Make a list of what you need help with and the times you need it. For example, I
need someone to keep my mother company and prepare her meals during work hours,
or I need someone to give Dad a ride to the senior center on Tuesdays and Thursdays
at 9:00 a.m.
- Consider what level of care is needed (companion, chore work, nursing) and whether
the care can be delivered at home or at an adult day care center.
- Consult your or your parents' insurance policy to see if any coverage is available.
Determine how much money you and your family can afford to spend on outside resources.
(Generally, long-term care is not covered by health insurance policies.)
- Explore care options in your community or near your parent's home.
Finding Community Resources
Information and Referral (I&R): These are services to help you locate programs
and services in your community. Senior or community I&R services maintain lists
of resources, by geographic area, to help you get started in finding the services
you need. In California, Caregiver Resource Centers can help you. In addition, if
you have access to the internet, there are a growing number of resource listings,
news groups and chat groups where you can seek out information on your own. Even
if your parent lives far away, you can find services to help.
Informal Arrangements
There may be chores that can be done by friends, family, neighbors or church members.
Simple tasks include preparing meals, providing rides, helping with grocery shopping
or laundry, providing reassuring phone calls or companionship for your relative.
Local senior centers or colleges often have programs for community volunteers.
A family meeting can be very helpful in discussing difficult medical and legal issues.
Identifying needs, airing concerns and delegating tasks should be done in an open,
supportive environment where all neccessary family members can be involved.
To work through certain family dynamics or conflicts, an outside person can be useful.
A geriatric care manager can be hired to help the family and caregiver make a care
plan and, if need be, to help with care arrangements and monitoring. This may be
especially helpful if your ill parent lives far from you.
In-Home Care
Home care can be either formal (home care agency or personal attendant) or informal
(friend, family, or volunteer). If no medical or personal care is needed, any caring,
responsible person may be suitable. An ad can be placed in your local community
or college newspaper to search for a responsible part-time companion and chore worker.
If care involves toileting or bathing, you will need a person who is trained and
competent. Similarly, if lifting the person and/or a wheel chair is necessary, be
sure the worker is physically able do the work. Always check references carefully.
If medications are to be dispensed, or nursing care is required, you will likely
need a licensed vocational nurse (LVN). A registered nurse (RN) is needed only when
more complex medical care is necessary (such as treating wounds, or managing a ventilator).
Medicare may be able to cover medically necessary part-time care for a home-bound
older person.
Adult Day Care
Adult day care centers provide a therapeutic environment for older adults outside
the home. They provide social services and activities in a safe, supportive environment.
Depending on the program, health and therapeutic care may or may not be available.
It is important to check eligibility criteria. Some centers may not accept participants
who are disruptive, have other health problems or are incontinent. Participants
generally attend several hours per day, up to five days a week. Transportation to
and from the adult day care center may also be provided.
Other Community Resources
In California, Caregiver Resource Centers (CRCs) provide a range of supportive services
to family caregivers of brain-impaired adults (e.g., Alzheimer's, Parkinson's, stroke,
traumatic brain injury, Parkinson's disease). CRCs help caregivers with information,
educational programs and emotional support, as well as planning for and arranging
services for a brain-impaired loved one.
Other community services include case management services, home-delivered meals,
transportation services, temporary overnight care, hospice (for terminally ill individuals),
and support groups (for either the caregiver or the ill individual). Your local
I&R service can help you locate these.
Residential Placement
When a parent can no longer be cared for at home, it may be necessary to consider
a residential facility. Arriving at this decision can be quite painful. Both you
and your parents are likely to have strong feelings about nursing homes. You may
want to discuss the decision with other family members, a counselor or spiritual
advisor.
Ultimately, it is important to evaluate your parent's current living situation and
carefully assess how care needs can be met. Concerns about safety, your parent's
ability to be left alone, medical needs, and adequate help for basic daily activities
(e.g., eating, dressing, toileting, bathing, moving around) should be considered.
In addition, the daily strain on the caregiver should not be ignored. If you, your
sibling or parent is the primary caregiver, it is vital to recognize when caregiving
demands exceed what is humanly possible. If you determine home is no longer a viable
option, it is time to look at residential placements.
Residential care options are not limited to what most people refer to as nursing
homes. A range of options exist for residential care. For maximum independence,
senior residences or assisted living facilities offer apartment-style living with
additional services such as meals, house cleaning, transportation, recreational
activities and, sometimes, an on-call nurse.
Residential Care Facilities (also called board and care homes), are group homes
for individuals who cannot live alone, but do not need skilled nursing. These facilities
offer help with personal care and hygiene, meals, social interaction with others,
and bedside care. They have 24-hour staff in case of emergencies. RCFs do not accept
Medicaid (Medi-Cal in California) reimbursement since medical care is not administered.
Skilled Nursing Facilities(SNF) provide nursing care to residents and must be equipped
to administer medications, injections and provide other nursing functions. SNFs
do not typically provide rehabilitative care (e.g., physical or speech therapy).
Medicare will pay for up to 100 days of medically-necessary skilled nursing care
in a SNF. Medicare pays 100% of the first 20 days. As of 1998, days 21-100 require
a $95.50 per day co-payment. Medicare will not pay for "custodial care."
Some nursing homes and hospitals have Special Care Units for individuals with Alzheimer's
disease. These facilities should provide specialized care, trained staff, and secured
premises. Since there is currently no federal care standard for special units, it
is important to obtain information on staff credentials, resident-to-staff ratio,
and the specific services offered to ensure that the unit provides a clear benefit.
Legal/Financial Issues
If a parent becomes cognitively impaired, you are likely to face a host of new legal
issues. Typical concerns include:
- Who will manage the confused person's money;
- Who will make important health care decisions; and
- How to plan for long-term care.
An attorney can help you plan for the financial aspects of your parent's long-term
care needs. At a minimum, a suitable attorney should have experience in estate and
financial planning, probate and wills. In addition, it is helpful for your attorney
to be familiar with public benefits (e.g., Medicaid—or Medi-Cal in California),
Social Security, special needs trusts, tax planning, and housing and health care
contracts. Some ways to locate an attorney include: your local County Bar Association
(attorney referral service), senior legal aide, or a personal recommendation from
a friend or fellow support group member.
Surrogate decision-making for a person with memory loss can be difficult and emotionally-charged.
The process can be simplified significantly, however, if your parent has completed
a durable power of attorney (DPA) and a durable power of attorney for health care
(DPAHC). These two very different documents enable your parent to designate another
person to manage his/her finances and health care decisions. To complete a DPA or
DPAHC, the person must be mentally competent at the time the documents are signed.
The legal authority to make surrogate decisions will begin only when and if the
person becomes incompetent. It is a good idea to have DPA and DPAHC forms reviewed
by an experienced attorney to ensure that the person's wishes are clearly expressed
and the information is complete.
In the case where your parent is already suffering from dementia and does not have
the capacity to make decisions, you may need to obtain a conservatorship. A conservatorship
provides the legal authority to manage a person's finances, estate, personal affairs,
assets and medical care. In order to obtain a conservatorship, a friend, family
member or public official must petition the court with facts about why the individual
can no longer manage financial or personal affairs. At a hearing, the judge determines
what special powers may be granted to the conservator. Conservatorships tend to
be complex; the legal agreements are court supervised and the conservatee's (impaired
person's) assets and income become part of the public record. In addition, prospective
conservators may face substantial costs for court, legal, investigator and conservator's
fees.
Handling Stress
Caring for an ill or disabled parent can be particularly challenging while juggling
the competing demands of work, family and caregiving. It is important to get the
emotional and practical support you need to cope with the stress of being a caregiver.
Taking care of yourself will help ensure that you are physically and emotionally
able to care for your impaired parent.
- Obtain up-to-date information. For example, Caregiver Resource Centers have a variety
of caregiver-related fact sheets and other materials to help you make informed decisions.
- Ask for help. Don't try to do everything yourself. A sibling, relative or friend
may be able to help you. Some organizations offer specialized care planning guidance
to help you get through the "maze" of long-term care options.
- When highly stressed, consider joining a support group or speaking with a professional
therapist.
- Be patient. There may be good days and bad days. Learn how to communicate effectively
with your parent without laying blame. It will take some time to arrange services
that address all needs.
- Give yourself a break. Remember to schedule some time to relax. "Respite care" is
designed to allow a break for the caregiver, and can last an hour, a day, or even
a week. Check your local resources.
What Employers Can Do
Eldercare is now recognized by a growing number of employers. Support for employees
who have caregiving responsibilities can take a variety of forms:
- Employers can offer "cafeteria style" employee benefits which allow employees to
select supplemental dependent care coverage to reimburse costs for in-home care
or adult day care. Benefits also should cover therapeutic counseling for the employee
to help cope with the stresses of caregiving.
- Human Resource or employee assistance program staff can provide information on helpful
Internet sites, local I&R services or resource centers.
- Larger businesses can organize in-house caregiver support groups or coordinate with
local community groups or hospitals so that employees can attend an outside support
group.
- One of the most critical benefits for an employee with caregiving responsibilities
is time. Flexible work hours, family illness days, and leave time are key. Data
from the Bureau of National Affairs (1993) found that flexible scheduling improved
job performance, decreased lateness and employee turnover, and increased job satisfaction.
- Companies with 50 or more employees must comply with the Family and Medical Leave
Act (FMLA), which allows for up to 12 weeks of unpaid leave to care for a seriously
ill parent, spouse or child, while protecting job security. Smaller firms can use
the FMLA guidelines to provide support for individual employees.
- Other ideas include holding a company "caregiver fair" or a series of lunchtime
seminars on issues such as hiring a home care attendant, or coping skills for caregivers.
Employers can establish a telephone hot-line, or publish a list of key contacts
in their employee newsletter.
- Offer private long-term care insurance coverage for employees, their spouses, and
dependents. Information on available insurance packages is available from the Health
Insurance Association of America (see listing under Resources).
© 1999 Family Caregiver Alliance.
All rights reserved