Loading…

Closing the Home Care Case: Clinicians’ Perspectives on Family Caregiving

Focus groups revealed five inherent conflicts that affect home health care clinicians’ interactions with family caregivers: (a) Services often depend on caregivers’ participation, but the home care system does not give them formal status or consideration; (b) clinicians must balance competing priori...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published in:Home health care management & practice 2005-08, Vol.17 (5), p.388-397
Main Authors: Hokenstad, Alene, Hart, Andrea Y., Gould, David A., Halper, Deborah, Levine, Carol
Format: Article
Language:English
Citations: Items that this one cites
Items that cite this one
Online Access:Get full text
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:Focus groups revealed five inherent conflicts that affect home health care clinicians’ interactions with family caregivers: (a) Services often depend on caregivers’ participation, but the home care system does not give them formal status or consideration; (b) clinicians must balance competing priorities within a short time frame; (c) clinicians recognize that families have unmet emotional and training needs, but benefits are not designed to address them; (d) clinicians face conflicting professional roles as patient advocates and service gatekeepers; and (e) agencies reserve social work services, a key to caregiver access to community resources, for their most difficult cases. Building a more rational system will involve raising awareness about the system’s limitation, providing more training and support for caregivers and the professionals who interact with them, and aligning financial incentives with the realities of what it takes to prepare caregivers to care for patients with complex needs when formal services end.
ISSN:1084-8223
1552-6739
DOI:10.1177/1084822305275504