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.
Paid caregivers (e.g., home health aides, home care workers) provide essential care to people with dementia living at home; this study explored family caregiver perspectives on the role and impact of paid caregivers in home-based dementia care. We conducted semi-structured interviews with family caregivers ( n = 15) of people with advanced dementia who received long-term paid care at home in New York between October 2020 and December 2020. We found that given the vulnerability resulting from advanced dementia, family caregivers prioritized finding the “right” paid caregivers and valued continuity in the individual providing care. The stable paid care that resulted improved outcomes for both the person with advanced dementia (e.g., eating better) and their family (e.g., ability to work). Those advocating for high quality, person-centered dementia care should partner with policymakers and home care agencies to promote the stability of well-matched paid caregivers for people with advanced dementia living at home.
e24162 Background: People with advanced-stage hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) are living longer given improved treatment effectiveness, yet we know little of their unmet palliative and supportive care needs. Previous studies of palliative care in populations of people facing liver diseases and liver cancer have cited difficulty with recruitment. Methods: This is a cross-sectional study at a single academic medical center. Participants are recruited from a multi-specialty liver cancer practice that includes surgery, interventional radiology, and medical and radiation oncology. Treating physicians identify appropriate participants from a list of pre-screened eligible individuals generated by the study team. Once enrolled validated survey instruments are used to collect data at two time points separated by one month and a qualitative interview is conducted that focuses on the experience of living with HCC. PDSA framework was used to improve recruitment procedures to a rate of 3-4 per month. Results: During the first four months we identified 19 potential participants. Of these, ten were ineligible: four did not meet timing criteria (enrollment before treatment initiation); three lacked English proficiency; and three were identified by their physician as not appropriate for the study. Of the remaining nine potential participants, four were unable to be contacted by phone, two were uninterested (including one who specifically ended the call after hearing the term palliative care), one was lost to follow-up, and two were consented and enrolled. In response, the following modifications were made to the protocol: (1) Medical eligibility criteria were liberalized so that enrollment could occur at any time during treatment; (2) a protocol to involve trained interpreters (in-person when possible) was implemented and a study team member who can conduct qualitative interviews in Spanish was added; (3) the title of the study was changed to more accurately focus on understanding quality of life (from “Palliative Care for People Facing HCC”) to address patient and physician concern; and (4) recruitment efforts are now focused on in-person introduction of the study to develop rapport. Since implementation of these changes, enrollment doubled in just one month. Conclusions: We identified actionable protocol modifications to increase study enrollment. Liberalized inclusion criteria, language inclusivity, and careful attention to stigma around palliative care may be generalizable to similar studies about supportive care, palliative care, and hospice in the population of people facing liver cancer. Additionally, avoiding language-based exclusions for lack of resources (rather than scientific ones) increases inclusivity in research and will allow for a more meaningful and accurate description of all our participants’ needs.
Many homebound individuals with dementia rely on both paid caregivers (e.g., home health aides, home attendants, other homecare workers) and family caregivers to live safely at home. We conducted semi-structured interviews with 15 family caregivers of individuals with severe dementia receiving home-based primary care in NYC to explore how caregiving changed during the COVID pandemic. Most individuals with long-standing paid caregivers experienced infrequent home care disruptions. In fact, paid caregivers were often the primary and sometimes only individuals to provide direct care; family caregivers themselves often stayed away and managed care from a distance. While most family caregivers described heightened attention to infection control, guidance about COVID prevention and safety rarely came from home-based primary care providers or home care agencies and instead was considered “common sense.” These findings confirm the essential role paid caregivers play in home-based dementia care teams.
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