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Health
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Articles
Family
Caregivers - 'Everyday Heroes' Need Help
September
16, 1998
Christian
Science Monitor
By
Marilyn Gardner
BOSTONnine
years ago, Carol Levine identified herself by three roles: wife,
mother, medical ethicist. Then her husband was severely injured
in an automobile accident. Ever since, she has been caring for him
at home, adding a fourth role - family caregiver.
As one of the
25 million Americans who minister to the needs of frail, ill, or
disabled relatives, Ms. Levine quickly discovered that this essential
work is fraught with isolation, inadequate training, and insufficient
help from social workers and health-care professionals. Too often,
she says, caregivers are simply encouraged to focus on "coping
- learning how to live with an intolerable situation by changing
one's own attitude and expectations."
Last Thursday,
Levine shared her perspectives with an important audience - members
of the US Senate Select Committee on Aging. Testifying in an all-day
hearing on family caregiving - the first full hearing on the subject
- she and other specialists in the field made urgent appeals for
more visibility, more support, and more respect for this unpaid
role.
"Most people
just feel they have to tough it out," Levine explains. "Nobody
really comes along and says, 'Let's talk about what would make it
easier for you.' It's so difficult to get that kind of concern,
or even permission to think about yourself."
Levine, now
director of the families and health care project at the United Hospital
Fund in New York, a research and philanthropic organization, calls
family caregivers "everyday heroes." Yet heroism or martyrdom,
she insists, "is not an ethical or practical standard for public
policy or health-care practice."
In focus groups
and conversations with caregivers, she hears recurring themes. One
challenge is economic. Some middle-class families who thought they
had comprehensive health insurance are being impoverished by caregiving,
in part because much of what they need at home falls under the unreimbursable
category of "custodial care."
At the same
time, cost-cutting efforts within health-care systems continue to
shift responsibilities to families in what Levine calls "unprecedented
ways."
Another challenge
involves the impact of caregiving on other family members. Often,
Levine notes, children are the ones neglected - "not willfully,
but because the demands of caregiving become so overwhelming."
Caregiving specialists
emphasize that no single solution exists, since every family's situation
is different. They see a need for an array of services. More respite
care, for instance, would give caregivers well-deserved time off.
More counseling and referral services would also help. So would
the ability to hold insurers to a high standard of performance and
accountability.
Levine also
wants caregiving to be part of training and continuing education
for those studying medicine, nursing, social work, and even theology.
"There
is a kind of vacuum in the response of the faith communities to
caregiving," she says, noting that in her conversations with
caregivers, "no one mentioned organized religious institutions
or clergy as a source of solace or assistance."
Again and again,
when Levine asks caregivers what they want, they tell her their
modest requests: "Someone to talk to who understands what I'm
going through." "Someone to call when I have questions."
"A day off."
As these private
wish lists affect more and more families, they can no longer be
avoided as a public-policy issue. The Senate hearing last week represents
an encouraging first step in giving voice to the unseen "everyday
heroes" who, out of necessity, love, and compassion, are performing
the most selfless tasks for others and who, in return, deserve a
measure of compassion themselves.
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