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A Call to Action:
Caregivers to Fight for Consumer Directed Care
By: Gema G. Hernandez, D.P.A.
Caregivers are the backbone of this
society and as such, the country must begin to honor and
support their needs and desires. Without caregivers
willing to give up their personal lives to keep their
loved ones at home, the economic crisis our country is
presently facing will be much worse and the Medicaid
deficit may reach a trillion dollar amount within the
year. It makes economic sense to allow caregivers to
direct the care of their family members, especially if
the family member is no longer able or willing to care
for himself or herself and the caregiver is willing and
able to take this responsibility. After all, without the
caregiver, there is nothing that will keep a frail
person at home.
It also makes human sense to provide financial
assistance to caregivers. Some of them will need to give
up their jobs because employers may not be sensitive to
the caregivers’ needs or would be willing to allow for
the missing days and missing focus. Caregivers should be
assisted financially if they are willing to provide the
services. This way, the entire family can financially
afford to take care of a frail child or a sick elder at
home.
However, even though it makes economic and human sense
to change the existing policy and begin to invest in the
caregiver and in the family, no government official has
taken the leap of faith to change the system. On the
contrary, we continue to invest hundred of millions of
dollars in supporting and expanding nursing home
placement while family members watch in horror as their
physical, emotional and financial strength disappears.
If it makes sense to help families direct the care for
their loved ones and even receive payment for what they
are willing to do, why is our government maintaining a
system of care driven not by the consumers, but by the
agencies? Our country’s system of care gives control and
decision making authority to the agencies and
businesses, not the person or the family. This system is
very expensive, impersonal and inflexible. It is my
belief that unless the caregivers of the nation come
together to demand with one voice that our loved ones be
given the option of direct control of their care, the
system will not change and the resources we need to make
our family situation more manageable will continue to go
elsewhere. The only power we have is the power of our
combined, synchronized voices demanding that our state
provide a consumer directed care option. Unless we speak
up, this will never happen because we will be left out
of the dialogue and negotiations will take place at the
time of budget allocations where we have no
representation.
I am a firm believer in consumer directed care. It is
the only mechanism allowing caregivers and their loved
ones to choose the providers and to select the best
combination of services to meet their unique needs. This
is particularly important in rural areas where consumers
may be waiting to receive services, not because the
money is not available to pay for services, but because
there are not enough workers to provide services. There
are not enough workers or agencies willing to transport
the individual, to deliver daily meals or to bathe the
patient. In situations like this, it makes sense to hire
a family member. I say hire, because in some cases, the
family doesn’t have the financial resources to survive
without a job. This is a cost effective way to deal with
the aging population and in meet the demand for quality
care. What we have found is that the family member or
neighbor hired to perform the caregiving job will spend
more than the limited hours of service a worker from an
agency will be able to provide and will do so for the
same compensation.
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