Transcript Document

10217
Lessons Learned from CTLB
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Community/Partnership
Organizations
Volunteers
Caregivers
Community/Partnership Lessons
• Grassroots effort creates a sense of
ownership, commitment to sustainability
• Success defined in a new way: creation
of a stable network to support informal
service providers
• Decentralized structure made it difficult
to implement Legacy Corps, secure
match funding
Organizational Level Lessons
• Organizational history, culture,
structure, capacity, etc., impact program
size, shape, potential for success
• Education needed so all understand
caregiving and value of the program
• Important to balance accountability with
flexibility to keep organizations engaged
Volunteer Lessons
• Volunteer succession difficult, despite
requiring two leaders
• Health, family, economic difficulties
pose challenges but highlight passion
and perseverance
• Stipends a necessity in low-income area
• Creativity needed to engage volunteers
in extensive outreach and evaluation
Caregiver Lessons
• Even volunteers from the same church
needed to be creative and persistent for
caregivers to accept their help
• Caregivers in this area traditionally ask
for “practical” help—respite,
transportation, meals, etc.
• But CTLB caregivers now describe
education and support groups as most
valuable
Over the past 37 years,
AgeOptions has established
a national reputation for
meeting the needs, wants and
expectations of older adults
in suburban Cook County.
We are recognized as a leader
in developing and helping to
deliver innovative communitybased resources and options
to the evolving, diverse
communities we serve.
A caregiver and her dad
Legacy Corps volunteers
1048 Lake Street, Suite 300
Oak Park, Illinois 60301-1102
ageoptions.org
phone (800)699-9043
(708)383-0258
Fax (708)524-0870
TTY (708)524-1653
10260
CaregiverCentral.org
A program of Share the Care, Inc.
Orlando, FL
PRESENTATION TO THE
HARRY & JEANETTE WEINBERG FOUNDATION
AMERICAN SOCIETY ON AGING CONFERENCE
WASHINGTON, D.C.
MARCH 28, 2012
Funded by the Harry & Jeannette Weinberg Foundation
Presenters:
Susan Dorries, Project Director
Annette Kelly, PhD, Research Director
In the Beginning…
We wanted to know if we could contribute to the lives of
caregivers through an online caregiver assessment tool.
 Will family caregivers even use an online self-assessment?
 Who are the caregivers in our community who are not currently
accessing services?
 Will an online self-assessment reach a diverse group of
caregivers?
 Will the menu of services generated by the online self-
assessment have value to the community? To service providers?
Our Fundamental Question:
Will Family Caregivers use an Online Tool?
THE ANSWER?
YES! Family Caregivers will use an online assessment tool.
 More than 7,500 visits to CaregiverCentral.org to date
 506 caregivers completed online caregiver assessments
Who are the Caregivers using CaregiverCentral.org?
Of the 503 caregivers who completed the online assessment…
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Average caregiver age = 54.2
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82.4% female
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Caregiver age ranged between 18 to 88 years
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67% White, 14.7% Black, 13.2% Hispanic
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47% are daughters, 19% are spouses
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64.9% of caregivers are married
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35.9% earn under $30K, 31.5% ($30K-60K), and 32% ($60K+)
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70.4% of caregivers provide daily care, and 69.8% of caregivers use no paid help
* Majority experience high to very high levels of Burden, Risk and Depression.
Have Caregivers Already Accessed Services?
CaregiverCentral.org reaches
caregivers that are outside of the
traditional community service
network…
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77 % were unfamiliar with
existing resources
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81 % were not currently
receiving any help
These statistics support the hypothesis that caregivers are self-identifying
themselves as caregivers earlier in the continuum as a result of accessing
CaregiverCentral.org.
Contribution to Caregivers & Community?
Caregiver Quality of Life
 In post intervention follow-up,
caregivers demonstrated improved
overall quality of life as indicated by
statistically significant reduction of:
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Caregiver stress
Caregiver risk
Caregiver burden
Direct Resource
Assistance for Caregivers
CaregiverCentral.org provided
direct community resource information
to individual caregivers on their selfidentified:
 Top
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care needs:
Respite Care
Home Care
Top task needs:
 Shopping and Meal Provision
 Transportation
Most frequent care concerns:
 Memory loss
 Falling or almost falling
 Feeling down or blue
Contributions, cont’d
Central Florida
Switzerland
CaregiverCentral.org: A Replicable Model for
Serving Family Caregivers
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Future Replication & Sustainability:
 Currently working with another national foundation to build upon the work
the Weinberg Foundation had made possible;
 Currently developing a beta site in Sarasota, FL
A Local Model with Potential for Broad Impact:
In the past 45 days alone, CaregiverCentral.org has been visited by users from:
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48 Cities in Florida
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24 States across the Nation, and;
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3 countries outside the U.S.
Thank you!
Caregiver
Initiative
Gathering
2012
Wednesday, March 28, 2012
LeadingAge, Washington, DC