Irene - could you put in a request for a "Caregiver Resources" (sub)forum?
The current issue of the AARP Magazine has a good article on "Caring for the Caregiver." This post contains the main article. See the link below for a resource list, an article with Lonnie Ali's suggestions, and tips for how people can help caregivers.
http://www.aarpmagazine.org/family/care ... giver.html
Caring for the Caregiver
By Sheree Crute
The AARP Magazine
November & December 2007
Theyâre often the last to ask for help, but the millions of people who manage the care of ailing family members and friends are themselves among the neediest
Four years ago Susan Jordan was dutifully making the three-mile drive from her suburban Nashville home to her elderly momâs house. It was a daily routine she cherished. âIâd check on her and help with her meals and her medication,â Susan says. The two would chat, share a laugh, make plans.
Then one day, a desperate call: âMy mom had lost her car,â Susan, 55, recalls. âShe just couldnât remember where it was; then she got lost trying to go home. A friend found her.â Susan instinctively knew this was âmore than just a memory problem,â but before she could even make the doctor rounds, her mother, Virginia Vanleer, then 88, fell and broke her hip.
Fiercely independent and determined to take care of the woman whoâd given her the âperfectâ childhood, Susan sprang into action. With the blessings of her husband, Ross, she brought her mom to the family house to live. âI was so happy, I cried,â she says. But in short order, reality hit: her mom began wandering, moving furnitureâand each time Susan left the house, her mom would let out a disturbing wail. Meantime, Ross, a cancer patient, was dealing with his own recovery from chemotherapy. And Susan herself was juggling a full-time career evaluating child-care agencies.
âThe entire family was in shock,â she says. âI felt trapped, depressed. I found myself thinking, âWhat have I done?â â
Not one to sit on her hands, Susan set about finding helpâall the while trying by herself to manage the bulk of her motherâs care. But things went from bad to worse: Susan severely injured her knee after regularly trying to lift her mom, who had taken another fall. âI was so tired,â she said.
Finally, after nearly a year of searching, Susan discovered a support group organized by the local Alzheimerâs Association, and for the first time, she says, âI knew I wasnât so alone.â
The leader of the group gave her a book on caregiving âthat became my bible,â she says, and members guided her to resources that led to the in-home care her mother needed.
It was, Susan says, the gift that saved her life. Not only did her new friends help stave off depression and a host of stress-related health problems; they showed her how to put some breathing room in her life and live again.
Among the 45 million caregivers of family and friends in this country, most donât get thrown that kind of life raftâand the toll, experts say, is enormous. A cascade of studies in recent years has shown that caregivers stand at particular risk for a host of mental and physical illnesses, many of which have roots in stress, exhaustion, and self-neglectâsymptoms some medical professionals have begun calling caregiver syndrome. Caregivers appear more likely than noncaregivers to get infectious diseases, plus they are slower to heal from wounds, says Janice Kiecolt-Glaser, Ph.D., director of the Division of Health Psychology at Ohio State University in Columbus. Kiecolt-Glaser has conducted several caregiver research studies with her husband, immunologist Ronald Glaser, Ph.D.
Caregivers also have greatly elevated blood levels of a chemical that is linked to chronic inflammation. And that puts them at increased risk for heart disease, arthritis, diabetes, cancer, and other diseases. Notably, says Kiecolt-Glaser, those levels are still high three years after caregiving duties end, especially among caregivers over 65. Whatâs more, the studies found a greatly increased risk for anxiety and depression.
The implications are far-reaching, given the millions of Americans who report devoting 12 to 40 hours each week or more to the most basic needs of loved ones. âEighty percent of the long-term care in the country is done by friends and family; we are the care system,â says Suzanne Mintz, president and cofounder of the National Family Caregivers Association.
According to a 2004 national survey by AARP and the The National Alliance for Caregiving, nearly 23 million households are currently home to a caregiver, most often a woman who is taking care of someone 50 or older. Some 43 percent of these caregivers are over 50 themselvesâ13 percent are over 65âand they spend good chunks of their weeks on a heady range of chores, from medication management and bathing to feeding, clothing, and arranging health care services.
They cross all ethnic, economic, and religious lines, too, with African Americans and Hispanics more likely to report having to struggle to get patient needs met. Medicaid, Medicare, and the majority of private medical-insurance plans offer little or nothing in the way of payments for home-care assistanceâthe most commonly needed care in later life. So, many caregiver families find themselves reaching into their own pockets, often straining the family coffers and boosting stress levels even more. Many also pass up job transfers and promotions, abandon hobbies, forgo vacations, andâmost dangerous of allâgive up the very relationships Kiecolt-Glaser says are âperhaps the single most important factorâ in keeping health problems at bay. Exhausted, anxious, and pressed for time, caregivers, she says, âtend to lose their networks and separate from their friends.â
For those peering in from the outside, the solution for the caregiver might seem obvious: speak up. Get help. In fact, experts say, thatâs often the hardest step to take. âYou know what they say: anything that doesnât kill you will make you stronger,â says Barbara Phenneger, 56, a full-time hospital accounts-payable clerk who for eight years looked after Bill Warren, her 87-year-old neighbor in West Chester, Pennsylvania. Though she never complained, Barbara became so exhausted that she finally sought out a home aide to give her a little relief. âI started imagining Bill; my husband, Bud; and the dogâall looking down on me laid out on the floor and saying, âBoy, she really did take good care of us!â â
For many caregivers, though, the thought of reaching out for help never occurs.
âI really believed I could do it on my own,â recalls Ann Barry, 70, a Brunswick, Maine, mother who has been a 20-year caregiver to her husband, Bill, 82. As his illnessesâheart disease, hydrocephalus (fluid on the brain), and dementiaâadvanced and he eventually needed a wheelchair, âI just kept trying to adjust my life,â says Ann, her girlhood southern accent still in evidence. But it didnât work. âI lost my sense of myself. After a while I had to start taking antidepressants.â Finally, a friend who develops community resources for the elderly recognized her pain. âShe said to me, âYou canât do this alone,â and led me to many resources,â says Ann, who joined a church caregiver group and ultimately became a caregiver supporter herself.
Unfortunately for many friends and family members of caregivers, it is difficult to know when to step inâor what to do, Mintz says. Some caregivers actually rebuff offers of help because they see acceptance as a sign of weakness or a âshirking of their duty,â says Barry J. Jacobs, Psy.D., a clinical psychologist in Springfield, Pennsylvania, and author of The Emotional Survival Guide for Caregivers: Looking After Yourself and Your Family While Helping an Aging Parent (Guilford, 2006).
For others, something even more profound may be at play: an attempt to quash emotions simmering just beneath the surface.
Many caregivers âexperience profound sadness and rage,â says Jed Levine, director of programs and services for the New York City chapter of the Alzheimerâs Association. While their caregiving may be driven by empathy and love, theyâre also dealing with guilt over the anger and frustration they feel. The very touchstones that define their livesâcareers, love relationships, friendships, even their dreamsâare often being sacrificed. Letting others in, says Levine, invites the risk that those nearly overwhelming emotions will be on display.
âCaregivers of spouses with dementia or Alzheimerâs lose the element of reciprocity that is the basis of a marital relationship,â Beeson says. âWhen this is gone, the sense of loss is tremendous.â
Mintz, who has been taking care of a husband with multiple sclerosis since the 1970s, says she knows from experience about that desire to protect pride and emotions. Her âbreakthrough momentâ didnât come, she says, until the day her husband, Steven, lost his balance and fell in the family bathroom. âAll I could do was drag him, slowly, across the floor to our bedroom. Iâm five feet one; heâs five feet eight. It took 45 minutesâit was awful. Thatâs when I knew it was not a one-person job.â And her husband agreed.
But Mintz is the first to admit itâs not easy getting people to let others into their lives. This is especially true of people in their 70s and 80s, who may be taking care of spouses or other close relatives. âThey werenât raised to talk about their problems,â Mintz says.
Research suggests itâs difficult for African Americans and Hispanics to open up, too, says geriatric psychiatrist Rita Hargrave, M.D., a clinician and researcher at the University of California at Davis. These groups âare less likely to admit being stressed, burdened, or depressed by caring for loved ones, when asked,â she says. âBut if you evaluate their physical symptoms of depression and stress, youâll find high levels of both conditions.â
Mintz says such cultural and age barriers are all worth considering when attempting to give family caregivers a hand. But no matter whoâs needing the help, she advises a gentle start. She suggests first encouraging the caregiver to find a âcaregiving buddyââa person whoâs facing similar caregiving challenges and could be a trustworthy confidante. Often, she says, the road to asking for broader support is shorter after that initial step.
If the caregiver resists, friends and family members should be patient, Jacobs says, because getting pushy or controlling will just make things worse. Praise the work the caregiver is already doing. If necessary, ask an empathetic health care provider to recommend your help. And, if possible, enlist the person receiving care. âPermission to get help will have more force coming from the patient than anyone else,â says Jacobs.
Once the caregiver begins to share some of the stresses, donât feel you have to move mountains, but do pitch in. âIt almost doesnât matter what you do for a caregiver, as long as you do something,â Jacobs says. Levine says simple gesturesâoffering to stay with the patient while the caregiver catches a Saturday matinee or runs errands, taking the caregiver and the patient to lunch, bringing over a casseroleâcan have a tremendous impact. If youâre great with paperwork, helping out with the piles of insurance forms can be a thoughtful and much appreciated gift.
Denise Gilardone says she can attest to that. Until last June, when George Engdahl, her fiancé of 18 months, died of brain cancer at 58, the 50-year-old marketing manager had been his primary caregiver for a year. âPeople would say, âLet me know if I can do anything,â and as goodhearted as that gesture was,â she says, âit was not helpful.â Often what she needed was specific offers, particularly offers of time. âIt sometimes became stressful in and of itself to make a lot of calls for relief when I needed to go somewhere,â she says. âThen people would feel bad or guilty if they couldnât come.â
Nudged by a hospice-care worker, Denise, who lives in Hingham, Massachusetts, eventually hired an aide to come two to three hours every Thursdayâand that spared her the discomfort of having to explain to others that she wanted to âgo to the health club, as opposed to the grocery store, which somehow seemed more acceptable.â Georgeâs âvery supportiveâ son, Eric, started coming Tuesday nights, and good friends came when she called. But it wasnât until the very end, she says, that it occurred to her to put eager helpers on a schedule.
Careful listening, Levine says, can often tip off family and friends to those kinds of practical needs, or signal when a caregiver may be âtruly lost in an emotionally wrenching situationâ and should be guided to professional help. Keeping a close watch can also clue friends to health problems caregivers may be developing, or existing problems that are getting worse.
Thatâs what happened for Susan Jordan, when her daughter, Stacy, began noticing Susanâs energy just wasnât what it used to be, even after sheâd gotten in-home help. Susan concedes that after she injured her knee, âI stopped my daily walking routine for three years.â But it was Stacy, a former high-school athlete, who saw what her mother could not. âShe said, âCome on, Mom, you can do this! Youâre walking and going to the gym with me,â â Susan says. âNow, Iâm going to the water-aerobics class at the local Y, too! People say I look a lot betterâand I feel a lot better.â
Giving attention to health can save a life, experts say, so think broadlyâeven beyond walks or yoga classes. Take the caregiver in your life along when you have your next cholesterol or blood pressure check. Or help schedule mammogram or colonoscopy tests for the caregiver and then arrange for transportation. This can be of particular help to people in their 70s and 80s, who âare at especially high risk for health problems if they are handling caregiving alone,â says Richard Schulz, Ph.D., director of the University Center for Social and Urban Research at the University of Pittsburgh and lead scientist on the nationâs largest study of Alzheimerâs caregivers, Resources for Enhancing Alzheimerâs Caregiver Health (REACH I and II).
Because many of these 70-plus caregivers are caring for spouses, though, Schulz advises being especially sensitive to relationship issues. The couple may need counseling for long-simmering marital stresses, or they may be embroiled in battles with adult children, he says. They may also be dealing with a basic, and profoundly sad, inability to communicate the way they once didâwhat caregiving experts refer to as relational deprivation, explains Rose A. Beeson, D.N.Sc., R.N., a researcher and the director of the Center for Gerontological Health Nursing and Advocacy at the University of Akron in Ohio.
Beeson says sheâs found in her research that wife caregivers often are hardest hit by the phenomenon, as they tend to give up social activities or other vital parts of their lives more readily. âWomen in this position need to keep going out with friends,â Beeson advises. So encourage that. Take them placesââplay cards; go to church.â Men, she says, tend to be relatively less depressed or isolated, in part because âpeople are much more likely to rush to help.â Also, men tend to be more circumspect and see taking care of their elderly wives âas an opportunity to give back to the woman who reared their children and took care of them and their home,â Beeson says.
Still, because all caregivers struggle in some way, experts say that reaching out to help them ease stress, while finding a bit of spiritual peace, might be one of the most positive moves of all. In the groundbreaking Alzheimerâs-caregivers study, deep breathing and other relaxation methods emerged as among the most effective tools for doing this, and these techniques have been highly encouraged since, says Schulz.
Thatâs not surprising, notes Herbert Benson, M.D., director emeritus of the Benson-Henry Institute for Mind Body Medicine at Massachusetts General Hospital and author of The Relaxation Response (Harper Paperbacks, 1975, 2000), which introduced millions to the concept of mind-body healing and a simple form of meditation. A friend to a caregiver, Benson says, does not have to be a spiritual master to learn a few techniques and then teach. And the payoff can be big.
âYou can give a caregiver the ability to be less frightened and to relieve themselves of stress-related problems, such as headaches, irritability, and illness,â he says. âThe key is to open yourself to the caregiverâs belief system and work within that.â The relaxation process itself is easy and can be done anywhere and anytime, says Benson. (See âGetting Help,&rdquo above.) âAll thatâs required is the choice of a favorite phraseâa prayer or a word will doâand the willingness to clear your mind.â
However you choose to help the caregiver in your life, experts say you should connect in the ways you think will be most meaningful and life-enhancing. And recognize that for all the caregiverâs stressâand the rebuffs of helpâthat personâs priority is to be of service to loved ones. As Susan Jordan puts it, âI look in the mirror and I can see that I am really tired some days.â But, she adds, âI had a wonderful childhood, thanks to my mom. Iâm happy to do this for her. I feel that Iâm the one receiving the blessings.â
Sheree Crute is a freelance writer based in New York City.