scholarly journals Utilization, Contributions, and Perceptions of Paid Home Care Workers among Households in New York State

2022 ◽  
Author(s):  
Madeline R Sterling ◽  
Joanna Bryan Ringel ◽  
Jacklyn Cho ◽  
Catherine A Riffin ◽  
Ariel C Avgar

Abstract Background and Objectives While family caregivers have traditionally provided care for older adults with chronic conditions and disabilities, the demand for paid home care workers has increased in the last decade. Although typically thought to assist with personal care emerging data suggest that paid home care workers assist with a wider scope of care. However, the extent and quality of the care they deliver remains poorly understood. Research Design and Methods Using the Empire State Poll, a telephone-based cross-sectional survey of 800 adults in New York State, we characterized the types of care that paid home care workers provided and the perceived value of that care. Results Of 800 participants surveyed, 274 reported that they or an immediate family member received care from a paid home care worker (34.3%). Of these, the majority (73.9%) reported that paid home care workers provided emotional and/or medical care, in addition to personal care. In adjusted models, providing emotional and medical care (compared to personal care alone) was associated with nearly a two-fold greater perception of importance and experience by the care recipients. Discussion and Implications Our findings provide additional data on how paid home care workers contribute to patient care, from the perspective of the care recipient(s). The type of care provided is associated with varying magnitudes of perceived quality. Although limited to New York, these findings have implications for paid home care workers’ training and compensation. Future studies are warranted to investigate the specific factors that mediate the association between types of care provided and their perceived value.

2019 ◽  
Vol 26 (3) ◽  
pp. 1631-1658
Author(s):  
Jerome Niyirora ◽  
Ossayne Aragones

Medical care services can be organized into a network. Understanding the structure of this network cannot only help analyze common clinical protocols but can also help reveal previously unknown patterns of care. The objective of this research is to introduce the concept and methods for constructing and analyzing the network of medical care services. We start by demonstrating how to build the network itself and then develop algorithms, based on principal component analysis and social network analysis, to detect communities of services. Finally, we propose novel graphical techniques for representing and assessing patterns of care. We demonstrate the application of our algorithms using data from an Emergency Department in New York State. One of the implications of our research is that clinical experts could use our algorithms to detect deviations from either existing protocols of care or administrative norms.


2009 ◽  
Vol 29 (5) ◽  
pp. 671-686 ◽  
Author(s):  
LIAT AYALON

ABSTRACTThis paper reports a study of family and family-like interactions and transfers, or exchanges of goods and resources, between paid, round-the-clock, Filipino home carers and those they care for in a sample of households in Israel. Qualitative interviews about their experiences and attitudes concerning the care role were conducted with 22 family members and 29 Filipino home-care workers. A thematic analysis of the interview data identified three major themes: the structure and internal dynamics of the adapted family or family-like system of care; the role of family members; and the role of Filipino home-care workers in the new system of care. Sons and daughters tended to appropriate the care-management positions and to reduce their social and emotional support for the care recipient. In contrast, spouse care-givers continued to provide some of the personal and emotional care even when a Filipino home-care worker was employed. Filipino home-care workers were made responsible for daily care and domestic routines and provided emotional and social care. It was found that family members do not relinquish their role as care-givers when round-the-clock foreign carers are on hand, but the nature of their role changes. The results suggest that foreign home-care workers' job description needs to be redefined to acknowledge the substantial social and emotional care that they provide.


2012 ◽  
Vol 24 (3) ◽  
pp. 309-327 ◽  
Author(s):  
Toby Adelman ◽  
Martin Kitchener ◽  
Terence Ng ◽  
Charlene Harrington

2005 ◽  
Vol 33 (9) ◽  
pp. 519-526 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cynthia R. Driver ◽  
Rachel L. Stricof ◽  
Karen Granville ◽  
Sonal S. Munsiff ◽  
Galina Savranskaya ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Jenny Hjalmarson ◽  
Stefan Lundberg

The aim of our study was to analyze home care workers’ movement patterns and back postures, relating them to risks while helping an ambulatory care recipient to and from the toilet in a homelike environment. We found that severe risks of unpredictable movements with exposed postures could explain many injuries. Because of high-risk injuries, we suggest decreasing the time when the care recipient stands and the home care worker helps with clothing and personal hygiene. We also suggest the development of support in front of the recipient to prevent her or him from falling forward.


2020 ◽  
Vol 4 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. 70-70
Author(s):  
Emma Tsui ◽  
Emily Franzosa ◽  
Kathrin Boerner

Abstract Home care workers (HCWs) make up a large and rapidly growing sector of the American health care workforce serving older adults. This study focuses on a common but understudied feature of home care labor: workers’ thoughts around what makes a "good" or "bad" patient death. While researchers have investigated patients’, families’, physicians’, and other care providers’ perspectives on this issue, the perspectives of HCWs, who contribute substantially to home-based care at the end of life, have yet to be explored. We conducted 40 in-depth interviews with HCWs in New York City on their experiences with and reflections on patient death. We used a inductive, iterative approach to analyze data on what HCWs believe is important for dying patients. HCWs described EOL values that align well with the views held in common by patients, families, and other care providers, like the importance of not being alone when dying and being physically comfortable (not in pain and not suffering). In particular, HCWs conceptualized a detailed role for themselves when providing EOL care near the time of death. HCWs’ sustained presence and relationships with patients may uniquely position them to assist in the attainment of patients’ EOL goals, particularly when HCWs understand what these goals are. HCWs’ potential for playing this role, however, is jeopardized by a lack of training in EOL care and by the limited information they receive about a patient’s health status.


2018 ◽  
Vol 29 (3) ◽  
pp. 382-392 ◽  
Author(s):  
Emma K. Tsui ◽  
Emily Franzosa ◽  
Kristen A. Cribbs ◽  
Sherry Baron

While many types of health care workers experience patient death, home care workers do so under vastly different social and economic circumstances. When a client dies, home care workers often lose both a close relationship and a job. Though research suggests that health care workers’ grief may frequently be disenfranchised, there is no in-depth study of the mechanisms that disenfranchise home care workers’ grief specifically. To address this gap, our study used focus groups and peer interviews between home care workers in New York City. We describe four interrelated grief strategies they employ to navigate social and employer-based “grieving rules.” Our findings suggest that home care workers’ grief is disenfranchised via employer and societal underestimations of their relationships with clients and their losses when clients die, particularly job loss. Building on our findings, we suggest alterations to agency practices and home care systems to improve support for workers.


JAMA ◽  
1933 ◽  
Vol 101 (5) ◽  
pp. 342 ◽  
Author(s):  
THOMAS PARRAN

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