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Caregiver Help
Caregiver Services
If
you are a caregiver and need help, assistance may be available
in your community. Most of the programs and services mentioned
in this guide are for adults 60 or older, and are federally
funded through the Older Americans Act.
Contact us to get information about these services and other
programs in your community. The goal of these services is
to support the caregiver so that he or she can continue as
the primary caregiver.
Services
that you might find helpful include:
- Information
- Assistance
- Counseling/Support Groups/Training
- Respite Care
- Supplemental
- Attendant and/or Personal Care
- Homemaker
- Nutrition Counseling
- Bathroom Items
- Chore
- Repair/Maintenance/Renovation
- Transportation
- Grandparents or Relative Caregivers Services
Service
Definitions:
Information: Group services, including public education,
information at health fairs and other similar events. (Outreach
interventions for the purposes of identifying potential caregivers
and encouraging their use of existing services and benefits.)
Assistance: Information on an individual basis to gain
access to services.
Counseling, Support Groups or Caregiver Training: Provision
of advice, guidance or instruction about options and methods
for providing support to caregivers.
Respite Care: A brief period of relief or rest for
caregivers. It can be in the form of in-home respite, adult
day care respite, or institutional respite for an overnight
stay on an intermittent, occasional, or emergency basis. Visit
our Respite Care page.
Grandparents or Relative Caregiver: Services may include
Information, Assistance, Individual Counseling, Support Groups,
Training, Respite, or Supplemental Services. The child being
cared for must be younger than 19. The grandparent or relative
caregiver must be 60 years or older, live with the child,
be the primary caregiver, have legal custody or guardianship
or be raising the child informally.
Supplemental Services: Other services provided on a
limited basis such as: Attendant and/or Personal Care, Bathroom
Items, Chore, Homemaker, Nutrition Counseling, Repair/Maintenance/Renovation,
or Transportation.
Transportation: This is a vital service to older persons
with limited mobility. Many public transit systems are fitting
buses and other vehicles with hydraulic lifts and other aids
to assist older persons and others that have physical disabilities.
To arrange transportation for an older person in your community,
visit our transportation
page for information.
Nutrition Counseling: To help improve health and control
a range of conditions and diseases. Older persons who participate
in a group meal program have an opportunity to socialize,
receive nutrition education, and take part in other activities,
including health screenings. Older persons who are homebound
may be able to receive a home-delivered meal. Click
here to find out about these meals. If these home-delivered
meals are not available, see if your grocery store prepares
food orders for pick-up or if they provides home-delivery
service. Many local restaurants deliver meals without additional
charge. Some even offer senior discounts on meals. Some offer
special low-fat and low-salt meals.
Chore: We may be able to arrange for chore
services or put you in touch with religious, scout or
other volunteer groups that provide one-time or occasional
services to older persons who need help.
Attendant and/or Personal Care: To supervise and/or
assist with bathing, medication, dressing, personal appearance,
feeding, transferring and toileting under the direction of
a licensed health professional.
Bathroom Items: May include the purchase price and
installation costs for toileting and personal hygiene items.
These items may include, but are not limited to: grab bars,
toilet riser, tub bench, commode, hand-held shower.
Repair/Maintenance/Renovation: These services can make
homes safer and more energy efficient, which may result in
greater independence for an older person with disabilities.
Senior Centers: A safe environment where older persons
can take part in a range of activities led by trained personnel
and where they can develop a network of friends.
Adult Day Care: This may be arranged for older persons
with physical limitations and cognitive problems. Adult Day
Care Centers can provide care in a safe, structured environment.
Adult day care can also provide relief to working caregivers
and respite for full-time caregivers. Most Adult Day Care
Centers, like senior centers, are supported through public
and non-profit organizations. There may be a fee, depending
on the services needed. Visit our Adult
Day Care page.
Determining
the Type of Care You Need
If you decide to hire a home care employee, you need to determine
how much and what type of help your older relative needs.
The following are descriptions of some of the types of home
care personnel:
- Chore workers perform basic household tasks. Chore
workers often do heavier types of cleaning such as washing
widows and other heavy cleaning.
- A homemaker may be supervised by an agency or you
and provides meal preparation, household management, personal
care and medication reminders.
- A home health care worker may provide personal
care, help with bathing, transfers, walking and exercise,
household services that are essential to health care and
assistance with medications.
General
Eligibility Requirements for Home Care Benefits
Medicare may pay for home health care services through a certified
home health care agency, if a physician orders these services.
Home health care agencies
focus on the medical aspects of care and provide trained health
care personnel. For a patient to be eligible for services
paid for under Medicare, they must need skilled nursing assistance,
or physical, speech and/or occupational therapy. Home health
care workers are a supplement to this care. If your older
family member or friend needs additional hours of care or
requires custodial care, they may be eligible for services
under Medicaid.
Home care agencies, which can be nonprofit or for-profit,
recruit, train and pay the worker. You are responsible for
paying the agency. Social Service agencies, in addition to
home care services, may provide an assessment of the client's
needs by a nurse or social worker, and they can help with
the coordination of the care plan. If services are being covered
under Medicare, your doctor, care manager, or discharge planner
will probably make arrangements with a home health care agency.
Selecting
an Agency
Ask the following questions when evaluating an agency.
- What
type of employee screening is done?
- Who supervises the employee?
- What types of general and specialized training have the employees received?
- Who do you call if the employee does not arrive to provide
service?
- What are the fees and what do they cover?
- Is there a sliding fee scale?
- What are the minimum and maximum hours of service?
- Are there limitations in terms of tasks performed or times
of the day when services are furnished?
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