1 / 28

Serving Caregivers Before Crisis

Serving Caregivers Before Crisis. Rhonda J. V. Montgomery, Ph.D. University of Kansas. Diversity of Burdens. Difficult tasks/Physical Health Time for other responsibilities Task Overload Privacy Loss of Roles Isolation Financial Burden Guilt.

norm
Download Presentation

Serving Caregivers Before Crisis

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Serving Caregivers Before Crisis Rhonda J. V. Montgomery, Ph.D. University of Kansas

  2. Diversity of Burdens • Difficult tasks/Physical Health • Time for other responsibilities • Task Overload • Privacy • Loss of Roles • Isolation • Financial Burden • Guilt

  3. Differences translate to need for different types of support • Education/Information • Support Groups • Respite care • Care Management

  4. Exhaustion Abuse Placement Rationale for Support Care Burden

  5. Exhaustion Abuse Placement Rationale for Support Support Care Burden

  6. Does this Rationale Hold? • Care does not always lead to burden • Diversity of burdens • Support does not always reduce burden • Not all caregivers will use support

  7. Relief Comes When: • COST < or = RELIEF • COST = Time + Physical Energy + Emotional Energy

  8. Maximize Relief With Optimal Service • Education • Counseling • Care Management • Support Groups • Respite Care • In-home • Day Care • Residential

  9. Maximize Effectiveness with Optimal Dosage • Quantity • Frequency • Timing

  10. Wife to Caregiver Husband to Caregiver Daughter to Caregiver Son to Caregiver Friend to Caregiver The caregiving career is a process of identity change

  11. An optimal change process: • Continuous - not abrupt • Accelerates the period between self identification (#2) and seeking service (4) • Lengthens the period between seeking service (#4) and nursing home placement (#6)

  12. Optimal supports facilitate identity shift • Teach caregivers about the caregiving role • Inform caregivers about options for care behaviors • Inform caregivers about options for supports • Teach caregivers to use supports

  13. #4 #4 #3 #2 Caregiving career: child

  14. #6 #6 #5 #4 #3 #2 Caregiving career: child

  15. #6 #5 #4 #3 #2 Caregiving career: child

  16. Children: Disease Process Community Based Services Legal and financial information Spouses Coping skills Behavior management In-home supports Education Programs

  17. Children Extending support network Knowledge of community services More easily attend if offered at the right time of day Spouses Changes in marital relationships Encourage seeking and using supports Options for respite care Coping with grief and guilt Self care Often need transportation and respite care to attend Support Groups

  18. Three Patterns of Respite Use • Brief use: 2 months or fewer • Average Users ( 9 to 12 months) • Long Term Users (18 or more months)

  19. Brief Users comprise • 30% of Clients • families who seek services that do not meet their need • Dissatisfied Consumers

  20. Brief Users Cost Money • Add to turnover • Increase need for marketing efforts • Increase staff time • Take up spaces that others could benefit from

  21. Best for clients with limited disabilities who are non-aggressive who do not engage in problem behaviors Well used by minority groups when appropriately targeted appropriately marketed Not easily used when care needs are high Preferred by working caregivers when Hours match work schedules Available daily Day Care

  22. In-Home Respite Most Used • Recipient resides with Caregiver • Most impaired clients • White • Caregiver is a Spouse

  23. Implications for Providers • Not all services meet the needs of all people. • Day Care programs can reduce the number of brief users by • Appropriate marketing • Relating clear expectations to clients • In-home programs best • when they are staffed by paid staff • who can provide personal care and • Assist with health needs.

  24. Implications for Delivery of Services • Identify the “Serviceable Moment” • clear expectations • respect • flexibility • Communicate

  25. Remember the client is the family Support means help for the caregiver that is more valuable than the cost of using the service.

  26. Reference • RJV Montgomery & K.D. Kosloski, “ Change, Continuity and Diversity Among Caregivers” http://www.aoa.gov

More Related