Winter
2008
Elder Home Care
— Workforce Challenge For the 21st Century
By Larry D. Wright, MD, FACP, AGSF
Aging Well
Vol. 1 No. 1 P. 32
As more people age at home, the need for trained caregivers
increases. Expanded recruitment of home caregivers and setting
national certification standards are a good start to the solution.
There’s an all-too-familiar scenario for professionals
in the American healthcare system working with older adults
and their families. It typically begins with a trigger event
such as the following: A widow living independently becomes
hospitalized for an acute illness. Just prior to being discharged,
she learns that she must have assistance with self-care at
home. The alternative is admission to a nursing facility until
she fully regains her independent functional status.
The patient and her family inquire about available home caregivers
for hire, only to find the hospital discharge planner is aware
of just a small list of individuals who do that work in the
area, and most are completely booked. As an alternative, he
offers a list of home care agencies which, though more expensive,
will provide the same type of caregiver. What often follows
is the stressful experience of learning firsthand the reality
of our country’s limited resources and support available
to keep older people at home.
The scarcity of workers who offer home care is just one way
the system fails to provide what older patients and their
families need to remain in their homes. The shortage is pervasive,
affecting every aspect of this particular direct-care workforce.
The reality is that the number of available employees is insufficient
for the current need, and the prospect of the supply meeting
the demand in the future looks even bleaker.
Broadly speaking, the term home caregivers encompasses four
different sources. There are two types of state-paid workers:
personal assistants supplied through a Medicaid-reimbursed
program and Medicare-covered aides working for a certified
home healthcare agency. Similarly, there are two different
privately paid workers, both of whom are paid either out of
pocket by the recipient and/or family or, occasionally, by
private long-term care insurance. These are generally independent
contractors or workers employed by a home care agency.
The other major factor in learning to navigate the noninstitutional
long-term care system is possibly of greater concern—the
widespread lack of training within the formal workforce. Neither
training nor certification is required among those in the
two groups representing privately hired workers. Even more
surprising is the inadequacy of the training provided for
many of those in the government-paid groups. By contrast,
the prerequisite of full training and certification as certified
nursing assistants (CNAs) is strictly enforced for care delivered
by new frontline employees in the institutional setting of
a nursing home.
Most Long-Term Care Occurs
in the Home
According to the 2002 Health and Retirement Study sponsored
by the National Institute on Aging, approximately 8.7 million
older adults in the United States are receiving long-term
care in the home as defined by the need for assistance with
at least one activity of daily living (ADL). Of those, 2 million
are classified as severely disabled or having three of more
areas of ADL dependency. To put this in proper perspective,
one must remember that the total population of elders receiving
long-term care in nursing homes is estimated to be 1.4 million.
Not only are most older Americans who require long-term care
receiving it at home, but the overwhelming majority prefer
to remain there, no matter how dependent or disabled they
may become. Recent Census Bureau data show the percentage
of adults 75 and older living in nursing homes has declined
significantly over the last 15 years, from 10.2% in 1990 to
7.4% in 2006. The oldest elders are less likely to reside
in nursing homes now—16% of those over 85 live in one
compared with 21% in 1985, according to the National Nursing
Home Survey.
Unfortunately for frail elders, it’s still true that
the single most important determinant of whether an individual
will have to move to a nursing home is the presence or absence
of an adult female relative willing to serve as primary caregiver.
This perception hasn’t changed over the last several
decades, but the reality of how much family caregivers can
be relied on in the future may change with the demographic
trends of the aging population and the shifting makeup of
the American family.
The “informal caregiver workforce,” a euphemism
for unpaid family caregivers, provides 75% to 80% of the care
for older adults at home. By any standards, this represents
a huge contribution to long-term care in the country. In economic
terms, it has been variously estimated that this group saves
the country up to $257 billion annually.
Currently, the representative baby boomer couple has more
living parents than children. That alone points to a major
part of the coming crisis in caregiving for the next 30 to
40 years. The backbone of home-based elder care—the
informal caregiver workforce—is a fragile, stressed-out
group. Vulnerable to the risks of burnout, depression, personal
health issues, inadequate personal finances, insufficient
support from other family members, lack of respite, and limited
community services or resources, the family caregiver simply
cannot continue to be the main solution to in-home caregiving
needs.
With the changes in the American family as another contributing
factor, the landscape of future elder caregiving becomes even
more challenging. Fewer children per family, more childless
couples, higher divorce rates, and adult children residing
at greater distances from their parents are just a few factors
that directly influence the ability of family caregivers to
continue to carry the load they have traditionally.
System Overhaul?
A mounting consensus among the professional healthcare and
social services communities favors a thoughtful, comprehensive
overhaul of the long-term care system in the United States.
Among the desired objectives would be accommodating the general
preference for care delivered in the home rather than an institutional
setting.
However, reaching an agreement on how to change the long-term
care system would likely be far less difficult than implementing
the change. If financing the new system is removed from the
discussion, the biggest obstacle would arguably be workforce
shortages, and the most taxing of these would undoubtedly
be the inadequate number of frontline caregivers (personal
care assistants and nurse assistants) to provide home care
for functionally dependent elders. Any such rational reorientation
of the system would result in a new emphasis on home care
as part of a more integrated system where care followed the
patient rather than being unreasonably restricted to institutional
settings.
The interest in meaningful change for the long-term care
system and concern about workforce shortages is hardly limited
to the professional community. This is reflected in the consensus
findings of the 2005 White House Conference on Aging, which
involved 1,200 representatives from a wide cross section of
concerned individuals nationwide. They were charged with bringing
50 recommendations for addressing the challenges of our aging
society. Two prominent issues noted in the conference’s
final report were improving America’s long-term care
system and addressing caregiver workforce problems, with proposals
directly involving them included in five of the top 10 and
nine of the top 20 recommendations.
Increasingly, learning to live with chronic diseases dominates
the health concerns of older adults heading to retirement
and beyond. As more of the population enters the later years
of elderhood, the toll of chronic diseases superimposed on
the aging process and physical deconditioning leads to mounting
numbers of dependent and disabled persons requiring long-term
care.
However, the American healthcare system is not focused on
the issues arising from increasing chronic disease and, least
of all, on the resulting dependency and increasing need for
long-term care services. Instead, it is a system that has
been built and sustained on a model of addressing all health
concerns using cutting-edge, high-tech, second-to-none acute
care interventions. It has captured the imagination of the
world with its ability to rescue, resuscitate, revive, cure,
and fast-track in the delivery of acute care.
Meanwhile, the progressive demographics of our aging society
brings an ever-increasing number of older adults into the
healthcare system. The fastest growing segment—the over-85
group—also has the greatest prevalence of chronic diseases,
frailty, and dependency. As a result, in 1995, for the first
time, the American healthcare system provided more units of
chronic than acute care, and the trend will likely not be
reversed in the foreseeable future.
The pervasiveness of the system’s acute-care emphasis
is best demonstrated by the inherent administrative and regulatory
focus of Medicare. Ironically, the very population whose health
is increasingly defined by chronic disease finds itself subject
to the qualifications and restrictions of a third party payer
that embraces the acute care template.
Clearly, the majority of long-term care already occurs in
the home. The description of the current system as being “institution
centered” reflects the system’s emphasis and bias
with respect to regulatory standards of care, reimbursement,
and entitlement. With the disproportionate numbers of individuals
receiving care at home, it’s paradoxical that most of
this care seems to occur outside the system rather than within
a more integrated situation.
Boomers Present Different Picture
The overall inadequacy of the long-term care system to satisfactorily
meet the current and projected demands for the burgeoning
older population seems to be continually more evident. What
may only become apparent later is the less-accepting attitude
of future elders—the baby boomers—toward the limited
options offered by the system to deliver the care they most
need and desire. Currently, they’re experiencing the
system as caregivers for their older parents and don’t
like what they’re finding. Having previously considered
aging from a more superficial viewpoint as the leading edge
of the culturally transforming youth movement, boomers are
receiving a wake-up call on the reality of the “golden
years” through their difficult decision making as caregivers.
In particular, it’s almost certain future retirees
won’t find the current institutional bias to be satisfactory
and will be even more insistent on receiving needed care in
their home. Those most needing long-term care services now
have been reluctant to complain, though they’re often
displeased. At the risk of stereotyping, it does seem that
among their many cited virtues has been their sacrificial
willingness to accept the undesirable rather than risk “being
a burden” to family or society.
It’s a safe bet this won’t be a feature of the
boomers’ late-life personality. If their parents could
be described as accepting, they’re more aptly labeled
as demanding. And the political clout attributed to boomers
may be brought to bear on issues that impact them in any major
way. It’s difficult to think of many issues that touch
boomers more personally or universally than the challenges
related to caregiving of older adults—their parents
at present and themselves over the next few decades.
Not Part of Broader Reform
But even with the political muscle boomers may possess, the
prospects of having a dramatic effect on the currently entrenched
long-term care system would be, at the very least, problematic.
It is widely believed that meaningful system reform will await
the completion of the larger battle for general reform of
the American healthcare system. Apparently, taking up the
fight only for major long-term care change would further tangle
the already complex undertaking of broader healthcare reform.
For that reason, it won’t be seriously addressed until
the latter has been accomplished.
This isn’t to say progress can’t be made toward
significant improvement of many deficiencies currently faced
in long-term care, especially with respect to the home caregiver
shortage. If the issue remains unaddressed for another decade,
incentivizing the growth and development of this crucial workforce
may be so far behind that we won’t be able to catch
up. Starting now to make recruitment for home caregiving more
attractive and effective can begin to make a difference. Setting
national standards for training is needed, especially for
those hired privately. National certification would be a positive
factor in raising the credibility and competence of this workforce
and could help address the low wage expectation. Finding creative
ways to develop benefits will also be crucial.
Older adults and their families who struggle to maintain
care in the home will increasingly need the respite well-trained
home caregivers can provide. It’s only with a blending
of family caregiving and the assistance of competent hired
caregivers that we’ll be able to care for our growing
older population in a way that allows them to avoid unnecessary
moves to other living facilities.
Our current elders deserve it. Hopefully, the boomers will
demand it.
— Larry D. Wright, MD, FACP, AGSF, is director
of the Schmieding Center for Senior Health & Education
and medical director of senior health at Northwest Health
System in Arkansas.
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