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Title The need for caregiver training is increasing as California ages
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Abstract As the first baby boomers reach age 65 in 2011, California will face unprecedented growth in its aging population. At the same time, budget cuts threaten California's In-home Supportive Services (IHSS), which now assists seniors aging at home and the disabled. We conducted a cost analysis and compared caseload changes using IHSS raw data from 2005 and 2009. Results showed an across-the-board increase in caseload and cost for indigent in-home care in California, with significant variation from county to county. Large numbers of minimally trained IHSS caregivers, and family caregivers with little or no training, raise concerns about the quality of care that elders and the disabled receive, while highlighting the need to protect the health and well-being of caregivers themselves. UC Cooperative Extension can play a vital role in training undertrained and unskilled caregivers through applied research, curriculum design, education and evaluation, and proposing public policy options to help raise the competencies of caregivers.

Authors
Barrett, Gloria Jean
County Director   Community Development   Public Policy Advisor
Community, Economic, and Workforce Development, Health Promotion, Aging Issues
Blackburn, Mary L
Family and Consumer Sciences, Health & Nutrition Advisor
Family and consumer sciences, EFNEP and FSNEP
Publication Date Oct 1, 2010
Date Added Oct 21, 2010
Copyright © The Regents of the University of California
Copyright Year 2010
Description

Informal and formal caregivers are underpaid and undertrained, and stress puts them at considerable risk of ill health.