Positive experience through informal care: construction of a scaleAn 8-item scale has been developed to measure positive experiences by informal caregivers, the Positive Experiences Scale (PES). The PES is a unidimensional hierarchical Mokkenscale which varies from intrinsic satisfaction and relational enhancement to improvement of competence and social enhancement. The scale has a satisfactory Loevinger's H-value (0.37) and reliability (0.74). Furthermore, satisfying H-values are found for large groups of informal caregivers, such as carers for the elderly, the chronically ill, partners, parents and people who live in a care facility. For informal caregivers of people with dementia or mental impairments, two items do not uphold ('I received appreciation for the care I've been giving' and 'the help brought me and my family and friends closer together'. For these groups a 6-item scale is advised. Solely for informal caregivers of people with psychological impairments, the scale as a whole does not uphold. Further research will have to determine how these caregivers derive positive experiences from caregiving. The PES is recommended because of its psychometric qualities and its usefulness in different populations of informal caregivers.
To measure the experienced burden by informal carers (N = 2.444), a 15-item Mokken scale has been developed. This concerns an extended version of the EDIZ ("Ervaren druk door Informele zorg"); several items refer to the pressure of time brought by the combination of labour and care and the consequences for the health of the informal carers are added to the EDIZ. We call this new scale the EDIZ-plus; it concerns a reliable one-dimensional and hierarchical scale which extends from o (no burden) to maximum 15 (severe burden). First, the burden manifests itself in feelings of responsibility of the carer, followed by having difficulty with combining work and family tasks and ultimately exceeding all limits due to too many obligations. In most cases this last group does not only deal with conflicts at home or at work and a decline in their own health, they also experience all other problems in the scale. The presumed limit for overburdening is enclosed by the proposition 'caring put too much pressure on me'. This is a score on the EDIZ-plus of nine or higher. Furthermore, the scale has proved to be usable for several population groups, such as carers of partners and children, parents/parents-in-law and carers of different patient populations (people with dementia, mental disability or a chronic disease). The EDIZ-plus is not only suitable because of its reasonable psychometric qualities, but also because of the usability in different populations.
Demand for services and staff in long term elderly care
Demand for services and staff in long term elderly care
The demand for nursing and care services, and the related demand for staff, will
rise the next few decades due to the ageing of the population. At the same time
the labour force will decrease. Staff shortages in the care sector are therefore
anticipated. In this article we compile a staff forecasting model based on
expectations regarding future use of nursing and care services. The sector
employed approximately 220,000 person-years (FTE). We expect an increase in the
demand for staff by 1.2% per annum, which leads to a total need for nearly
300.000 FTE in 2030. Further developments such as the increasing use of
community based-care and personal budgets or reduction in funded care packages
would lead to upward or downward adjustments of the forecasts. The study shows
that caution is needed when assuming that the expected demand for labour can be
damped by increasing labour productivity. Up to date, such trends are not shown
in elderly care.
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