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Showing posts from August, 2023

The value of caregiving work - 2023 08 29

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  "Women average about 52 minutes per day caring for children and other family members..." From https://fortune.com/2023/08/14/women-caregiving-missed-pay/ Based on this average amount of caregiving per day, and rated at $14.55/hr (per child-care workers or home health aides), the article states that family caregiving is worth approximately $4,600 per year. The article does not state whether this is per care recipient (ie. per child or a multi-generational household). However, the metric that family caregiving only requires 52 minutes per day does not explain the negative impact of family caregiving on socio-economic vulnerabilities for caregiving families. It makes no sense. We need a time / materials study of family caregiving homes to quantify the work that is being carried out day to day to provide caregiving beds for family members who cannot fend for themselves. We need to understand how much time, effort, expenditures, and lost opportunities need to be factored to unde...

Systems Imperative - Valuing Care - 2023 08 21

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  It takes a village to raise a child. It also takes a village to care for village members who can no longer fend for themselves. It is anti-social to leave the care of a family member who cannot fend for themselves to one isolated family caregiver. It undermines health outcomes for our society when we accept this approach as a default solution. Valuing care as an integral, essential component of our healthcare system needs to include valuing family caregiving. Institutional healthcare providers are placing increasing dependence on family caregivers to make up caregiving infrastructure deficits that are arising from institutional and government care mismanagement, negligence or system deficiencies. Whether the negative socio-economic impacts of family caregiving can be attributed to mismanagement, negligence or system deficiency, the solution lies in understanding the systems imperative to improve outcomes for family caregivers. When we value care, when we value family caregiving, ...

Systems Imperative: When Families Say "No" - 2023 08 20

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Everyday I read of the anguish and despair of family caregivers suffering unbearable stress because they feel they are failing their families and their loved ones in their caregiving mission. Today I read the post from a young family caregiver (27) who was in so much pain they tried to take their own life instead of attempting to continue caregiving their grandmother (75). When the suicide attempt failed, they abandoned their grandmother to save themselves. To this young ex-caregiver I say, "You needed to save yourself in a situation that was destined to fail." To the healthcare system that put this young family caregiving in this situation, I say, "Shame on you." I read other posts from young and middle age family members asking if they should move their family member in with them to take on family caregiving. Or if they should move to their family member's home to help them out. To these potential family caregiving families, I say, "You need to balance yo...

Caregivers and Solitary Confinement - 2023 08 01

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SOLITARY CONFINEMENT, which is also referred to as segregation, isolation or separation, is the practice of confining an individual in custody to a cell by themselves for 22 hours or more a day, often for prolonged periods at a time.  (Google Search 2023 08 01) I read the anguished, despairing dispatches from caregivers in the frontlines of family caregiving. They are isolated, lonely, exhausted, depressed, frustrated and anxious.  In the United States, NBC News reported introduction of a bill that would broadly ban the use of solitary confinement in federal prisons, jails and detention centres by a coalition of House Democrats last month (July 2023). The measure seeks to codify into law the limitations on when and how long someone can be left isolated in a cell. In some cases the family caregivers are part of a wider family system but they do not have adequate supports from other family members and cannot afford to hire replacement paid care (in my local area the rates are $4...