A New Stage of the Caregiving Career: Informal Caregiving After Long-term Institutionalization

Author:

Robison Julie T12ORCID,Shugrue Noreen A1ORCID,Fortinsky Richard H12ORCID,Fabius Chanee D3ORCID,Baker Kristin1,Porter Martha1ORCID,Grady James J2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Center on Aging, UConn Health, Farmington, Connecticut, USA

2. Department of Public Health Sciences, UConn Health, Farmington, Connecticut, USA

3. Bloomberg School of Public Health, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland, USA

Abstract

Abstract Background and Objectives The “unexpected career” of caregiving has previously been conceptualized in stages: community care through institutional placement/residence, ending with death of the care recipient. Transition programs such as Money Follows the Person (MFP) created a new stage of the caregiving career, caring for someone post–long-term institutionalization, about which little is known. Using Pearlin’s Caregiver Stress Process Model, this study explores effects on caregivers from the return of their loved ones to the community after a long-term institutional stay. Research Design and Methods Cross-sectional surveys of 656 caregivers of persons transitioned through Connecticut’s MFP program 2014–2018, completed 6 months posttransition. Results Regardless of the age/disability of the care recipient, and despite experiencing high caregiving intensity, caregivers experienced less burden, anxiety, and depression, and higher benefits of caregiving than demonstrated in literature for the general caregiving population. Most felt less stressed than before and during the participant’s institutional stay. Factors associated with worse outcomes included worry about safety, strained finances, missing work, and desiring additional services. Black and Hispanic caregivers experienced lower burden and anxiety and higher benefits of caregiving than White caregivers. Discussion and Implications By providing community supports to participants, transition programs can have broad ancillary benefits for caregivers and improve outcomes in the Pearlin model, lessening potentially deleterious effects of an unexpected return to intensive caregiving duties after institutional placement. Positive results for Black and Hispanic caregivers may reflect cultural expectations in caring for family that buffer the adverse effects of caregiving.

Funder

Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Geriatrics and Gerontology,Gerontology,General Medicine

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