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Help for Working
Caregivers
~ Caring
for elderly family members ~
Contributed by
Dena Howard, J.D.
Senior Care Managers of Northeast Florida
Serving -
Jacksonville ~ St. Augustine ~ Daytona Beach, Florida
www.seniorcaremanagersfla.com
(904) 730-8831~ Email:
Dena@seniorcaremanagersfla.com
Caregivers caring for elderly family members have an enormous unmet need for information
that is probably not being served by their employer’s
Employee Assistance Program (EAP).[1]
Working caregivers have little or no time to learn
about available resources and look to the Internet,
friends, family and their doctors when they do seek
information. More than two-thirds of surveyed
caregivers say they need help with or information
about many issues they commonly face.[2]
Working
caregivers of elderly recipients are the most in need
and most difficult to reach segment of the caregiver
population. Studies show that working caregivers have
more burdens and fewer opportunities to obtain
personal, face-to-face counseling and locally specific
resources than caregivers who are not employed.
[3]
“A typical caregiver in the U.S. is female,
approximately 46 years old, has at least some college
experience, and spends an average of 20 hours or more
per week providing unpaid care to someone age 50 or
older. A majority of caregivers are married, and most
have juggled work with caregiving responsibilities at
some point during their role as caregiver.
[4]
Older caregivers (defined by this study as age 50-64)
are more likely to be providing care for 10 years or
more, and their care receivers tend to be parents and
spouses.
[5] The main problems of care receivers were identified as
old age, diabetes, cancer, stroke, and dementia.[6] Caregivers who live with their care receivers are more
likely to report they are in fair or poor health, they
are primary caregivers, and their care receivers are
more likely to have the most needs for assistance with
two or more independent activities of daily living (IADL’s).
[7]
The impact of caregiving on caregivers include
increased emotional stress, giving up vacations,
hobbies or other social activities, leaving work
early, going into work late, taking time off a working
day to provide care, taking leaves of absence from
work, going from full-time to part-time work, taking a
less demanding job, quitting work, losing job
benefits, turning down promotions, or choosing early
retirement.[8]
Employee Assistance Programs initially appeared in
corporate life as worksite, in-person counseling and
follow-up monitoring for employees who were referred
for substance abuse problems that resulted in
absenteeism or other work-related management
problems. Now in a fourth-generation type of program,
EAP’s have shifted to a cost containment/capitated
managed
care
model that has been outsourced to one of only a
handful EAP companies “that combine work/life and
employee assistance into a single, primarily
telephonic and Internet-based service.”[9]
These services may be keeping employer costs down, but
studies in the HR field show that EAP’s who have
Worksite Counselors engaged in face-to-face counseling
and follow-up monitoring are actually utilized 60%
more than EAP’s who offer only 1-800 telephonic
counseling. Worksite EAP’s also “received 500%
more supervisory referrals and identified 300% more
employee substance abuse cases."
[10]
Employees with depression or substance problems often
do not seek out professional help on their own.
Supervisors and HR professionals are more likely to
intervene when they meet in person with an EAP
counselor “whose name and face they know from repeated
worksite visits, as opposed to calling an 800 number
and speaking to a mental health professional who has
never set foot in their workplace."[11]
Senior
Care Managers of Northeast Florida, LLC is not
an EAP. We are trained and experienced consultants
who are familiar with locally specific resources for
elderly adults and caregivers. If the information
that most working caregivers get from their employer’s EAP is a 1-800 telephone contact -- who probably
does not have more than the phone numbers for Area
Agency on Aging and Eldercare Locator -- then most
working caregivers are getting only a small fraction
of the help they need. What we offer to working
caregivers is locally specific information and an
opportunity to meet with us in person again and again
as Worksite Counselors.
Senior
Care Managers offers employers three valuable
services:
-
As a
no-cost addition to an employer’s benefits package,
Senior Care Managers serves as a locally-specific
information and referral source. I&R calls, within
certain time limits, are provided free to the
employer and employee.
-
Worksite Counselors and Elder Care Management
services are available to employees at a employee
discounted rate for a specified number of hours when
Senior Care Managers is an approved provider for the
employer.
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Senior Care Managers provides seminars and workshops
for employees and supervisors with specific
information on caregivers’ top 10 needs for help or
information, along with problem-solving strategies
for coping with stress. Our programs are tailored
to the needs of attendees, and range from a 1-hour
workshop to a full-day seminar.
How can
we help your employees and your organization? Call us
and let's talk!
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