Cathy Cress

Expert in Aging Life and Geriatric Care Management

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How to Assess the Caregiver and Avoid Hospital Readmission

September 6, 2019

 

Assessing the Family Caregiver is a new but crucial concept for geriatric care managers and professionals in aging.As geriatric care managers and aging professional, we are health and social services oriented. For almost 3 decades we have assessed the care receiver for problems with function, social connection, and psychological issues. If we suspect depression we have completed that screen. If our client plans to move, has cultural needs and preferences, exhibits signs of dementia, need ways to improve quality of life or a spiritual connection, we have assessed the care receiver for those problems.

All our assessments have left out the major fact – care is an exchange. To receive care, the patient/client usually needs a family caregiver to give or supervise it. That family caregiver is the glue that holds it all together and his or her inner bond begins to break with the strain of caring.

Other countries have seen what the US has yet to grasp. In the United Kingdom, a seminal law passed in 1995 called the Recognition and Services Act , which provided British caregivers a statutory right to request an assessment at the same time that a frail elder or adult with disabilities is assessed.

So developing a caregiver assessment is critical, especially in this era of penalties to hospitals for readmission. The caregiver is the key to keeping an older person in the community and not back in the hospital. If they are not trained, have physical problems that inhibit caring, find some tasks, like changing adult diapers uncomfortable, have no car to pick up meds or drive to the doctor’s follow up an appointment, you have a problem and probably a readmission.

Learn how to do a caregiver assessment along with a care receiver assessment .This will help you keep your aging client both out of the hospital and potentially out of inappropriate placement in a skilled nursing facility. Plus you will learn just not how to assess caregiver burnout but be able to create a care plan that will help your family caregiver have a better quality of life while they giver better care to their loved one. Read the chapter ” Assessing the Caregiver ” in my book Care Manager’s Working With the Aging Family, Jones and Bartlett. The price has just been cut in half to make it more affordable for the practitioner.

Filed Under: Aging, Aging Life Care, aging life care manager, Blog, care manager, caregiver, caregiver assessment, case manager, elder care manager, Families, GCM Start -Up, Geriatric Care Management Business, Geriatric Care Manager, geriatric care manager, geriatric social worker, home care, nurse advocate, nurse care manager, Private Duty Home Care, Quality of Life Tagged With: aging parent, aging parent care, caregiver assessment, caregiver burnout, caregiver family meeting, caregiver overload, caregiver overload with sisters, caregiving family members, caring for a yourself as a parent, case manager, elder care crisis, geraitric assessment, geriatric care management, geriatric care managers, geritaric care manager, National Association of Geriatric Care Managers, parent care, Psychosocial assessment, red flags for a family meeting, stress and burden

How to Assess the Caregiver and Avoid Hospital Readmission

October 1, 2017

 

Assessing the Family Caregiver is a relatively new but crucial concept for geriatric care managers and professionals in aging.As geriatric care managers and aging professional, we are health and social services oriented. For almost 3 decades we have assessed the care receiver for problems with function, social connection, and psychological issues. If we suspect depression we have completed that screen. If our client plans to move, has cultural needs and preferences, exhibits signs of dementia, need ways to improve quality of life or a spiritual connection, we have assessed the care receiver for those problems.

All our assessments have left out the major fact – care is an exchange. To receive care, the patient/client usually needs a family caregiver to give or supervise it. That family caregiver is the glue that holds it all together and his or her inner bond begins to break with the strain of caring.

Other countries have seen what the US has yet to grasp. In the United Kingdom, a seminal law passed in 1995 called the Recognition and Services Act , which provided British caregivers a statutory right to request an assessment at the same time that a frail elder or adult with disabilities is assessed.

So developing a caregiver assessment is critical, especially in this era of penalties to hospitals for readmission. The caregiver is the key to keeping an older person in the community and not back in the hospital. If they are not trained, have physical problems that inhibit caring, find some tasks, like changing adult diapers uncomfortable, have no car to pick up meds or drive to the doctor’s follow-up an appointment, you have a problem and probably a readmission.

Learn how to do a caregiver assessment along with a care receiver assessment.This will help you keep your aging client both out of the hospital and potentially out of inappropriate placement in a skilled nursing facility. Plus you will learn just not how to assess caregiver burnout but be able to create a care plan that will help your family caregiver have a better quality of life while they giver better care to their loved one. Read the chapter ” Assessing the Caregiver ” in my book Care Manager’s Working With the Aging Family, Jones and Bartlett. The price has just been cut in half to make it more affordable for the practitioner.

 

Filed Under: Aging, Aging Life Care, aging life care manager, Blog, care manager, caregiver, caregiver assessment, case manager, elder care manager, Families, GCM Start -Up, Geriatric Care Management Business, geriatric care manager, Geriatric Care Manager, geriatric social worker, home care, nurse advocate, nurse care manager, Private Duty Home Care, Quality of Life Tagged With: aging parent, aging parent care, caregiver assessment, caregiver burnout, caregiver family meeting, caregiver overload, caregiver overload with sisters, caregiving family members, caring for a yourself as a parent, case manager, elder care crisis, geraitric assessment, geriatric care management, geriatric care managers, geritaric care manager, National Association of Geriatric Care Managers, parent care, Psychosocial assessment, red flags for a family meeting, stress and burden

How to Assess the Caregiver and Avoid Hospital Readmission

August 30, 2017

 

Assessing the Family Caregiver is a new but crucial concept for geriatric care managers and professionals in aging.As geriatric care managers and aging professional, we are health and social services oriented. For almost 3 decades we have assessed the care receiver for problems with function, social connection, and psychological issues. If we suspect depression we have completed that screen. If our client plans to move, has cultural needs and preferences, exhibits signs of dementia, need ways to improve quality of life or a spiritual connection, we have assessed the care receiver for those problems.

All our assessments have left out the major fact – care is an exchange. To receive care, the patient/client usually needs a family caregiver to give or supervise it. That family caregiver is the glue that holds it all together and his or her inner bond begins to break with the strain of caring.

Other countries have seen what the US has yet to grasp. In the United Kingdom, a seminal law passed in 1995 called the Recognition and Services Act , which provided British caregivers a statutory right to request an assessment at the same time that a frail elder or adult with disabilities is assessed.

So developing a caregiver assessment is critical, especially in this era of penalties to hospitals for readmission. The caregiver is the key to keeping an older person in the community and not back in the hospital. If they are not trained, have physical problems that inhibit caring, find some tasks, like changing adult diapers uncomfortable, have no car to pick up meds or drive to the doctor’s follow up an appointment, you have a problem and probably a readmission.

Learn how to do a caregiver assessment along with a care receiver assessment .This will help you keep your aging client both out of the hospital and potentially out of inappropriate placement in a skilled nursing facility. Plus you will learn just not how to assess caregiver burnout but be able to create a care plan that will help your family caregiver have a better quality of life while they giver better care to their loved one. Read the chapter ” Assessing the Caregiver ” in my book Care Manager’s Working With the Aging Family, Jones and Bartlett. The price has just been cut in half to make it more affordable for the practitioner.

 

Filed Under: Aging, Aging Life Care, aging life care manager, Blog, care manager, caregiver, caregiver assessment, case manager, elder care manager, Families, GCM Start -Up, Geriatric Care Management Business, Geriatric Care Manager, geriatric care manager, geriatric social worker, home care, nurse advocate, nurse care manager, Private Duty Home Care, Quality of Life Tagged With: aging parent, aging parent care, caregiver assessment, caregiver burnout, caregiver family meeting, caregiver overload, caregiver overload with sisters, caregiving family members, caring for a yourself as a parent, case manager, elder care crisis, geraitric assessment, geriatric care management, geriatric care managers, geritaric care manager, National Association of Geriatric Care Managers, parent care, Psychosocial assessment, red flags for a family meeting, stress and burden

U.S. far Behind internationally in Caregiver Assessments

February 26, 2013

PDF-Cover-of-11-10-12My-Geriatric-Care-Management-Agency.jpg

 

 

Other nations are ahead of the United States in recognizing the needs of caregivers. In Ireland Liam O’Sullivan, Executive Director, Care Alliance shared their case for as they call them “carer”. Assessments http://www.carealliance.ie/userfiles/file/The%20Case%20for%20Carers%20Assessments%20June%202012.pdf

 

Other countries have seen what the US has yet to grasp. In the United Kingdom a seminal law passed in 1995 called the Recognition and Services Act http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/1995/12/section/1, which provided British caregivers a statutory right to request an assessment at the same time that a frail elder or adult with disabilities is assessed.

Why are we so far behind?

 

 

Filed Under: Aging Tagged With: aging parent, aging parent crisis, assessing the caregiver, Care Managers Working with the Aging Family, caregiver assessment, caregiver burden, caregiver burnout, caregiver family meeting, caregiver overload, caregiver overload with sisters, caregiver overwhelm, caregiver stress, caregiving family members, carer assessment Ireland, checklist for aging parent problems, Family Caregiver Alliance, geraitric care manager, Geriatric Assessment, geriatric care management, geriatric care managers, My Geraitric Care Management Operations Manual, National Association of Geriatric Care Managers, Psychsocial Assessment, PTSD in family caregivers, stress and burden

Depression Is A Caregiver Crisis

February 23, 2013

PDF-Cover-of-11-10-12My-Geriatric-Care-Management-Agency.jpg

Depression is rampant among caregivers . It is in face a caregiver crisis.
Loss is the underpinning of depression

loss of your parent

loss of you own free time

loss of your spouse

loss of freedom

 

What are the triggers to caregiver depression? Unpaid family caregivers are often angry with others not helping out, especially other family members. They can be angry with the care- receiver for interrupting, embarrassing, repetitive behavior

 

Feeling trapped, can often make caregivers bitter. They feel they have no choice and this is their fate in the family.

Exhaustion can be another trigger for anger and depression in a family caregiver.

 

They frequently feeling tired because you can’t get enough rest

The Family Caregiver Alliance that almost 60’% of caregivers show signs of clinical depression.

 

This is why a caregiver assessment and a GDS geriatric depression scale are so important to an aging family caregiver’s mental health and the care receiver’s good care. For younger caregiver’s, metal health supports are crucial care

Family Caregiver Alliance has a host of suggestions for caregivers to deal with depression.

Filed Under: Aging Tagged With: aging parent care, aging parent crisis, Care Managers Working with the Aging Family, caregiver, caregiver assessment, caregiver burden, caregiver burnout, caregiver family meeting, caregiver overload, caregiver overload with sisters, caregiver overwhelm, caregiver stress, case manager, checklist for aging parent problems, Family Caregiver Alliance, Functional Assessment, geraitric assessment, geraitric care manager, geriatric care management, informal supports of an older person, My Geraitric Care Management Operations Manual, NAPGCM, National Association of Geriatric Care Managers, parent care, PTSD in family caregivers

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