Abstract

As the locus of long-term care in the United States shifts from institutions to the community, paid caregivers (i.e., home health aides, personal care attendants) are providing more hands-on care to persons with dementia living at home. Yet, little is known about how family caregivers engage with paid caregivers. We conducted in-depth, semi-structured interviews (n = 15) with family caregivers, of persons living at home with severe dementia, and enriched our findings with data from a second cohort of family caregivers of persons with dementia (n = 9). Whether paid caregivers were hired privately or employed via a Medicaid-funded agency, family caregivers reported that they needed to manage paid caregivers in the home. Core management tasks were day-to-day monitoring and relationship building with family caregivers; training paid caregivers and coordinating care with homecare agencies was also described. In order to support family caregivers of individuals with dementia at home, it is important consider their preferences and skills in order to effectively manage paid caregivers. Support of efforts to build a high-quality paid caregiving workforce has the potential to improve not only care delivered to persons with dementia, but the experiences of their family caregivers.

Highlights

  • IntroductionMany persons with dementia opt to remain living in the community with home and community-based long-term services and support, even as their illness progresses [1]

  • While family caregivers provide the bulk of needed care for persons with dementia living at home, they frequently turn to paid caregivers to provide additional support [2,3]

  • In Study 1, interviews were conducted between October 2020 and December 2020 with family caregivers of persons living with severe dementia enrolled in a large, academic home-based primary care program in New York City (n = 15)

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Summary

Introduction

Many persons with dementia opt to remain living in the community with home and community-based long-term services and support, even as their illness progresses [1]. While family caregivers provide the bulk of needed care for persons with dementia living at home, they frequently turn to paid caregivers (e.g., home health aides, personal care attendants, and other home care workers) to provide additional support [2,3]. Demographic shifts towards a shrinking population of younger people, many of whom live at a distance from their older relatives, will only increase reliance on paid caregivers to provide care for persons with dementia living at home [4,5].

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