| Historically, the family has been the first and
primary source for Long-Term Care services. In fact, 80% of older
Americans needing Long-Term Care services rely primarily on family,
friends and the community for support. Nearly 75% of these informal
caregivers are women, and 12% are themselves over 65 years old.
In one out of four US households, there is at least
one adult caring for someone 50 or older. More than 25 million
Americans are family caregivers to ill, disabled and/or elderly
adults.
Family caregivers are the bedrock of our national
health care system. The market value of the services provided by
family caregivers is over $200 billion dollars a year -- or 20% of the
total for all actual health care expenditures. This trillion dollar
system rests on an invisible fault line that is vulnerable to collapse
-- the unpaid family caregiver.
Silent Struggles
In previous generations, daughters or daughter-in-law cared for their
aging parents. Today, a majority of daughters are working and their
incomes are key to family standard of living. Today's families are
mobile, often spread over great distances, or separated by gridlock at
key hours of the day. Today's older persons are living a lot longer
than their parents, women are having their families later, and many
daughters are sandwiched between caring for their kids and caring for
their aging parents. These silent struggles often result in two people
impacting the health care system -- the aging parent and the exhausted
family caregiver.
Financial
Many women are in the middle of their own careers when they must give
it all up to take care of mom. Others, just when their kids have left
home or have entered college, and looking forward to going back to
school themselves, establishing a small business, or getting
established in a new career, suddenly see those aspirations evaporate
because they now have to take care of mom or dad. Many previous
"stay at home" moms looked forward to reentering the work
force and earning their own retirement benefits, or possibly earning
the minimum social security credits. Those simple hopes often become
squashed when they must now continue to work as an unpaid family
caregiver, not to their children, but to their own parents.
Caregiver Health
Family caregivers tend to develop acute illnesses earlier than others.
Many family caregivers die before the care receiver. As much as
you may want to take care of your mom or dad in your own home or
theirs, please consider the risks to yourself and your immediate
family--family caregiving can have unintended adverse consequences.
Make sure your support system is in place before you begin. This
support system must include ample time for yourself each day,
professional help, and monthly respite.
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