FCRP Policy Statement
Volume-1- Edition-1
Family Based Long Term Care for the Elderly
Panel studies of families caring for elderly
patients at home with physical and cognitive disorder may
provide direction for refining policies regarding long-term
home care. These conclusions are drawn from interviews with
over 550 Michigan families caring for their elderly relatives.
These families have been providing this care for an average
of four or more years.
- Despite caring for patients with dependencies similar
to nursing home residents, family members use very few community
services. Not all families want or need services, but for
those that do, services are not used because families cannot
afford services, do not know how to engage them, are unsure
what patient related conditions warrant their use, and have
found them not to be sensitive to the needs of their patients.
We recommend that the medical care system assume greater
responsibility for linking families with community carp
and instructing them when and how to use these services.
- Criteria for eligibility -for home care might be targeted
to patients who need assistance with mobility and who are
incontinent. Patients with such needs require more assistance
-than those with self-care needs, e.g. bathing and dressing.
- Pat patients with cognitive impairments demand more supervision
and require special care and consideration not often available
in community agencies. Continual supervision for a patient
with mid-stage Alzheimer's Disease may be more demanding
in a 24 hour day than caring for those who need help with
dressing and bathing. Respite services need to be developed
and delivered in a manner acceptable to these families.
- Established caregivers do not vary in their psychological
reactions to caring over time. Despite the fact that some
patients deteriorate and others improve, caregivers vary
only slightly in their levels of depression. Therefore,
assistance to families providing home care should not be
premised upon the psychological state of the caregiver.
Instead, assistance should be premised upon assessment of
the patient's physical and cognitive deficits and current
level of involvement of caregivers and others and upon patient
changes over time.
- Finally, the intact family caregiving -situation should
be reassessed periodically. Services should be delivered
after consideration of the needs of both the patient and
caregiver. Only in this way can community based and home
centered long term care meet the needs of the growing population
of elderly patients-and their, family caregivers and enable
the family to continue providing this needed care.
This research supported by grant
#2 R01 AG06584, "Caregivers Responses to Managing Elderly
Patients, at Home," funded by the National Institute on Aging,
Charles W. Given and Barbara A. Given, Principal Investigators.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Charles W. Given,
B-100 Clinical Center, Department of Family Practice, Michigan
State 'University, East Lansing, MI 48824-1313. For further
information call 1-800-654-8219 or (517) 353-3843.
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