ARTICLES / General / Family
Caregiving and Public Policy ... /
Other Articles
Share This Article
Family Caregiving and Public Policy
Principles for Change
By Suzanne Mintz, et al
Caregiving has always been a
universal experience in our society affecting people of
all races, ethnicities, lifestyles, and income levels,
but in our time family caregiving has become more than
an act of love and familial responsibility. It has
become an essential element of our health and long-term
care system. This is so for a number of reasons:
Historically caregiving was short-lived. Most people
died from infectious diseases until the advent of
antibiotics in the 20th century. The average lifespan in
1900 was just 47. Today it is in the mid 70s, and the
majority of people die from the consequences of a
chronic condition. This means caregiving situations
typically last years or decades–or, in some cases, such
as when children are born with congenital abnormalities
or developmental disabilities, an entire lifetime.
Institutionalization of individuals with chronic or
disabling conditions has given way to a growing movement
toward mainstreaming and community living. This movement
has now become the law of the land with the handing down
of the Supreme Court‘s Olmstead decision.
In the midst of these changes, major demographic trends
are also having an impact on family caregiving.
Family members no longer live in close proximity to the
extent they did in the past. Long distance caregiving is
a result of our enhanced mobility and changing social
order.
Women have traditionally played the role of family
caregiver, but in this era when women make up almost
half the labor force, they are less available to take on
the role of family caregiver.
Add to these changes the fact that America is currently
facing an ever-growing health care worker shortage at
the same time that health and long-term care costs
continue to rise. As a result of cost containment
policies and practices, people with health needs are
being discharged from hospitals or other acute care
settings with more complex care needs and curtailed
homecare services, which means more responsibility for
families, who are inadequately prepared and trained.
It is clear that given these circumstances American
health care is now on a collision course with the
day-to-day reality of families coping with chronic
conditions. Without attention to this situation, the
$257 billion in unpaid supportive services provided by
the more than 25 million family caregivers1–an amount
comparable to Medicare spending in 2002 and exceeding
Medicaid spending in the same year2–may well be
jeopardized as these same family caregivers suffer from
physical, emotional, and financial problems that impede
their ability to give care now and support their own
care needs in the future. As this pattern plays itself
out, the quality of care provided to individuals with
disabling or chronic conditions or the frail elderly
will diminish and the costs to the nation‘s health care
system skyrocket.
Now more than ever, the United States needs to develop
responsible social policy to address the needs of
caregiving families who have unwittingly taken on the
dual jobs of health care and social service provider.
The following principles apply to caregivers in all
situations, although how they would be implemented would
vary by setting.
*These Principles were developed in 2003 by a
collaborative group of family caregiver advocates
including:
Lynn Friss Feinberg, National Center on Caregiving/Family
Caregiver Alliance; Jane Horvath, Health Policy Analyst;
Gail Hunt and Les Plooster, National Alliance for
Caregiving; Jill Kagan National Respite Coalition; Carol
Levine. Families and Healthcare Project, United Hospital
Fund; Joanne Lynn, MD, Americans for Better Care of the
Dying; Suzanne Mintz, National Family Caregivers
Association; Ann Wilkinson, Rand Corporation;
December 1, 2003
PRINCIPLE 1
Family caregiving concerns must be a central component
of health care, long-term care, and social service
policymaking.
. • Family caregivers provide approximately 80% of all
long-term services and supports for family members and
friends across the lifespan.3, 4
. • Services provided each year by family caregivers are
conservatively worth $257 billion, more than double the
annual spending on home care and nursing home care
combined, and comparable to 20% of all health care
spending.5
. • Family caregivers put their own health and well
being at risk in the service of their loved ones as they
simultaneously save the health care system significant
amounts of money.6, 7
Despite the wealth of services they provide, and in
spite of their staggering numbers, family caregivers
continue to be the most neglected group of the health
and long-term care system. In return for family
caregivers‘ contributions to the public good, society,
through its public and private sectors, must support
caregivers through well-designed policies, programs, and
practices.
PRINCIPLE 2
Family caregivers must be protected against the
financial, physical, and emotional consequences of
caregiving that can put their own health and well-being
in jeopardy.
Among their many roles, family caregivers are integral
but unpaid partners in the health care system. As such,
they provide care at significant costs to themselves
Out-of-pocket medical expenses for a family that has a
loved one with a disabling or chronic condition who
needs help with activities of daily living (eating,
toileting, etc.) are more than 2.5 times greater than
for a family without a family member with a disabling or
chronic condition (11.2% of income compared to 4.1%).8
The majority of caregivers are employed and many are
forced to make changes at work to accommodate caregiving.
Over the course of a caregiving —career,“ family
caregivers providing intense personal care can lose as
much as $659,000 in wages, pensions and Social
Security.9
Family caregivers who provide care 36 or more hours
weekly are more likely than non-caregivers to experience
symptoms of depression or anxiety. For spouses the rate
is six times higher; for those caring for a parent the
rate is twice as high.10
Caregivers use prescription drugs for depression,
anxiety and insomnia two to three times as often as the
rest of the population.11
The stress of intense family caregiving for persons with
dementia has been shown to impact a person‘s immune
system both in terms of increased chances of developing
a chronic illness and in significantly slowing wound
healing.12, 13
PRINCIPLE 3
Family caregivers must have access to affordable,
readily available, high quality respite care as a key
component of the supportive services network.
Respite, often the most frequently requested family
support service,14 provides caregivers with occasional
relief necessary to sustain their own health or attend
to other family members. In emergency situations, a
temporary haven to ensure the safety of the person for
whom they provide care and provide them with a quality
experience as well becomes an absolute necessity.
Without respite, not only can families suffer
economically and emotionally, caregivers
themselves may face serious health and social risks as a
result of stress associated with continuous
caregiving.15
Respite has been shown to help sustain family stability,
avoid out-of-home placements, and reduce the likelihood
of abuse and neglect.16
New preliminary data from an outcome
based evaluation pilot study show that respite may also
reduce the likelihood of divorce and help sustain
marriages.17
Respite, however, remains in short supply for all age
groups, or is inaccessible to the family because of
eligibility requirements, geographic barriers, cost, or
the lack of culturally sensitive programs. Thus,
lifespan systems need to be in place to identify and
coordinate federal, state and community-based respite
resources and funding streams across ages, disabilities,
and family circumstances; to provide easy access to an
array of affordable, quality respite services; to ensure
flexibility to meet diverse needs; to fill gaps and
address barriers in existing services; and to assist
family caregivers with locating, training, and paying
for respite.
PRINCIPLE 4
Family caregivers must be supported by family-friendly
policies in the workplace in order to meet their
caregiving responsibilities. Examples of family-friendly
workplace policies include: flextime; work-at-home
options; job-sharing; counseling; dependent care
accounts; information and referral to community
services; employer-paid services of a care manager and
more.
Currently, only large Fortune 500 companies tend to have
programs to support family caregivers–and then only for
those caregiving for elderly relatives. Few small and
mid-sized businesses–where most Americans work–have
programs supporting family caregivers and are
increasingly cutting paid health benefits as well. As a
result, most family caregivers struggle to balance work
and family responsibilities.
Forty-two percent of parents of children with special
needs lack basic workplace supports, such as paid sick
leave and vacation time.18
Family caregivers are doubly penalized when they
temporarily leave the workforce for caregiving. Not only
may they lose actual pay, but they also lose social
security credits and this can impact their own ability
to care for themselves in the future.
PRINCIPLE 5
Family caregivers must have appropriate, timely, and
ongoing education and training in order to successfully
meet their caregiving responsibilities and to be
advocates for their loved ones across care settings.
Family caregiving is a complex responsibility, involving
emotional support, household management, medical care,
dealing with a variety of governmental and other
agencies, and decision-making. Yet family caregivers
consistently report that they were —not prepared“ for
these roles. This lack of training occurs throughout the
caregiving experience, but is most apparent when care
recipients are discharged from hospitals or short-term
nursing home stays after an illness or accident. One
national survey found that 43 percent of caregivers
performed at least one medical task, defined as
bandaging and wound care, operating medical equipment,
or managing a medication regimen.19 Yet formal
instruction is sporadic and inadequate. Families are
expected to perform —skilled“ nursing care, but without
the training that professionals must receive.
Family caregivers‘ needs for information and training
change throughout the course of their loved one‘s
illness. They must have opportunities to learn new
skills as they become necessary, access new resources,
and learn about options for care as the situation
changes. Families need honest information about the
financial, social, and health-related consequences of
various arrangements for care, and they must share in
the decision-making about care arrangements.
Professionals must provide information in
understandable, nonjudgmental and culturally competent
ways that reflect sensitivity to the caregiver‘s
emotional involvement with the care recipient. Policy
makers should support programs that bring family
caregivers and professionals together to further
collaboration.20
PRINCIPLE 6
Family caregivers and their loved ones must have
affordable, readily available, high quality,
comprehensive services that are coordinated across all
care settings.
People who need the assistance of family caregivers
typically have complex, chronic medical conditions and
functional limitations. As a result, they require
services from many parts of the medical and long-term
care systems. Unfortunately, coordination of information
and services within each system and between these
systems rarely occurs.
Use of community services increases with level of
disability as well as with age. Thirteen percent of
people over 85 use community services (home-delivered
meals, transportation, care management, etc) compared to
only one percent of persons ages 50 - 64. Case
management services play an important role in linking
persons with available services as well as managing
public expenditures for long-term services.21
Thirty-two percent of people with serious chronic
conditions see four or more different physicians in a
year. Medicare beneficiaries with five or more
conditions see an average of 14 different physicians in
a year.22
In 2000, 50 percent of caregivers reported that
different providers gave different diagnoses for the
same set of symptoms and 62 percent reported that
different providers gave other conflicting information.
Another recent survey found that 44 percent of
physicians believe that poor care coordination leads to
unnecessary hospitalization, and 24 percent stated poor
care coordination can lead to otherwise unnecessary
nursing home stays.23
It is in this environment that caregivers must take on
the complicated and difficult role of care coordinator œ
ensuring that treatments prescribed by different
providers do not conflict and ensuring that important
medical and functional information travels across
providers, settings, and over time. Care coordination
(within the medical system and across medical and
supportive service systems) is not common in health care
today. 24 Lack of coordination, resulting in poor health
outcomes, can drive inappropriate and potentially
unnecessary spending.
PRINCIPLE 7
Family caregivers and their loved ones must be assured
of an affordable, well qualified, and sustainable health
care workforce across all care settings.
Millions of family caregivers and their loved ones
require medical and non-medical assistance from direct
care workers, either at home or in institutional
settings. Currently, there is a growing shortage of
these paraprofessional and professional workers that is
impacting the quality and continuity of care. The
problem is projected to get worse as the Baby Boom
generation ages.25
A shortage of well qualified, reliable, and affordable
health care workers has a direct impact on the health
and safety of persons with chronic conditions or
disabilities. It also has a direct impact on the health
and well being of family caregivers who must pick up the
extra workload, much of which requires training and
support they do not have, and which adds to their
caregiving burden.26
PRINCIPLE 8
Family caregivers must have access to regular
comprehensive assessments of their caregiving situation
to determine what assistance they may require.
Social service and health care providers cannot assume
that family members can always provide care for a frail
elder or person with disabilities.
Family caregivers should be considered an integral part
of the long-term care system, as individuals with rights
to their own support and assessments of their own needs.
An assessment of the family caregiver‘s strengths, needs
and preferences constitutes the
foundation for developing appropriate and quality
long-term care.27, 28, 29
The availability of family members or others to provide
uncompensated care should not be considered in
allocating long-term care benefits (as in the Medicaid
program).
ENDNOTES:
1 Arno, P.S. (February 24, 2002). Economic Value of
Informal Caregiving. Orlando, FL: Annual Meeting of the
American Association of Geriatric Psychiatry.
2 MedPAC. (2002). Report to the Congress: Assessing
Medicare Benefits. Washington, DC: MedPAC.
3 US General Accounting Office. (1994). Long-Term Care:
Diverse, Growing Population Includes Millions of
Americans of All Ages (GAO/HEHS 95-26). Washington, DC:
GAO.
4 Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (2000). The
Characteristics of Long-Term Care Users. Silver Spring,
MD: AHRQ.
5 Arno, P. S. (February 24, 2002). Economic Value of
Informal Caregiving. Orlando, FL: Annual Meeting of the
American Association of Geriatric Psychiatry.
6 MacCallum, R., et al. (2003). Chronic Stress and
Age-Related Increases in the Proinflammatory ILœ6.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Science, 100(15),
9090 œ 9095.
7 Schulz R, & Beach, S.R. (1999). Caregiving as a risk
factor for mortality: The caregiver health effects
study. JAMA, 282, 2215-2219.
8 Altman, Cooper, & Cunningham. (1999). The Case of
Disability in the Family: Impact on Health Care
Utilization and Expenditures for Non-disabled Members.
Milbank Quarterly, 77 (1), 39 œ 75.
9 National Alliance for Caregiving and Brandeis
University National Center on Women and Aging (1999).
The MetLife Juggling Act Study: Balancing Caregiving
with Work and the Costs Involved. Westport, CT: MetLife
Mature Market Institute.
10 Cannuscio, C.C., C Jones, C., Kawachi, I., Colditz,
G.A., Berkman, L., & Rimm, E. (2002). Reverberation of
family illness: A longitudinal assessment of informal
caregiver and mental health status in the nurses‘ health
study. American Journal of Public Health, 92, 305-1311.
11 George, L.K., & Gwyther, L.P. (1986). Caregiver
Well-Being: A Multidimensional Examination of Family
Caregivers of Demented Adults. The Gerontologist, 26(2),
253-260. As cited by Scharlach, A.E., Lowe, B.F., and
Schneider, E.L. (1991). Elder Care and the Work Force:
Blueprint for Action. Ontario, Canada: Lexington Books.
12 Kiecolt-Glaser, J., Trask, O.J., Speicher, J.R., &
Glaser, R. (1995). Slowing of Wound Healing by
Psychological Distress. The Lancet, 346, 1194-1196.
13 Schulz, R. & Beach, S. R. (1999). Caregiving as a
Risk Factor for Mortality: The Caregiver Health Effects
Study. Journal of the American Medical Association,
282(23).
14 National Alliance for Caregiving & AARP (1997).
Family Caregiving in the U.S.: Findings From a National
Survey. Bethesda, MD: Authors, 1997.
151) Abelson, A.G. (1999). Economic Consequences and
Lack of Respite Care. Psychological Reports, 85,
880-882; 2) Sherman, B.R. (1995). Impact of home-based
respite care on families of children with chronic
illnesses. Children‘s Health Care, 24(1), 33-45; 3)
Theis, S.L., Moss, J.H. & Pearson, M.A. (1994). Respite
for caregivers: An evaluation study. Journal of
Community Health Nursing, 11(1), 31-34; and 4) Zarit,
S.H., Parris Stephens, M.S., Townsend, A., & Greene, R.
(1998). Stress reduction for family caregivers: Effect
of adult day care use. The Journal of Gerontology,
53B(5), S267-S277.
16 1) ARCH National Respite Network and Resource Center
(2002). Annotated Bibliography of Respite and Crisis
Care Studies: Second Edition. Chapel Hill, NC: ARCH
National Respite Network and Resource Center; 2) Cohen,
S. & Warren, R. (1985). Respite Care: Principles,
Programs, and Polices. Austin, TX: PRO-ED; 3) Wade, C.,
Kirk, R., Edgar, M., & Baker, L. (2003). Outcome
Evaluation: Phase II Results. Chapel Hill, NC: ARCH
National Resource Center for Respite and Crisis Care.
17 Wade, C., Kirk, R., Edgar, M., & Baker, L. (2003).
Outcome Evaluation: Phase II Results. Chapel Hill, NC:
ARCH National Resource Center for Respite and Crisis
Care.
18 Heyman, J. (2000). The Widening Gap. New York: Basic
Books.
19 Donelan, K., et al. (2002). Challenged To Care:
Informal Caregivers in a Changing Health System. Health
Affairs, July/August 2002, 222-231.
20 Levine, C. (1998). Rough Crossings: Family
Caregivers‘ Odysseys through the Health Care System. New
York: United Hospital Fund.
21 AARP (2003). Beyond 50 2003 - A Report to the Nation
on Independent Living and Disability. Washington, DC:
AARP.
22 Op. cit.
23 Op. cit.
24 DeJonge, E. & Leff, B. (2003, August 7). A Real
Medicare Remedy. Washington Post, p. A21.
25 ASPE, CMS, HRSA, DOL Office of the Assistant
Secretary for Policy; BLS & ETA (2003). Future Supply of
Long-term Care Workers in Relation to the Aging Baby
Boom Generation: Report to Congress. Washington, DC:
ASPE.
26 Donelan, K., et al. (2002). Challenged To Care:
Informal Caregivers in a Changing Health Care System.
Health Affairs, July/August 2002, 222-231.
27 Feinberg, L.F. (in press). The state of the art of
caregiver assessment. Generations.
28 Feinberg, L.F., Newman, S.L. & Van Steenberg, C.
(2002). Family Caregiver Support: Policies, Perceptions
and Practices in 10 States Since Passage of the National
Family Caregiver Support Program. San Francisco: Family
Caregiver Alliance.
29 Gaugler, J.E., Kane, R.A. & Langlois, J. (2000).
Assessment of family caregivers of older adults. In R.L.
and R.A.Kane, eds. Assessing Older Persons: Measures,
Meaning and Practical Applications. New York: Oxford
University Press.
Printable Version
|
|
|