9780871546395-0871546396-Who Will Care For Us?: Long-Term Care and the Long-Term Workforce

Who Will Care For Us?: Long-Term Care and the Long-Term Workforce

ISBN-13: 9780871546395
ISBN-10: 0871546396
Author: Paul Osterman
Publication date: 2017
Publisher: Russell Sage Foundation
Format: Paperback 232 pages
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Book details

ISBN-13: 9780871546395
ISBN-10: 0871546396
Author: Paul Osterman
Publication date: 2017
Publisher: Russell Sage Foundation
Format: Paperback 232 pages

Summary

Who Will Care For Us?: Long-Term Care and the Long-Term Workforce (ISBN-13: 9780871546395 and ISBN-10: 0871546396), written by authors Paul Osterman, was published by Russell Sage Foundation in 2017. With an overall rating of 4.1 stars, it's a notable title among other Human Resources & Personnel Management (Human Resources) books. You can easily purchase or rent Who Will Care For Us?: Long-Term Care and the Long-Term Workforce (Paperback) from BooksRun, along with many other new and used Human Resources & Personnel Management books and textbooks. And, if you're looking to sell your copy, our current buyback offer is $0.3.

Description

The number of elderly and disabled adults who require assistance with day-to-day activities is expected to double over the next twenty-five years. As a result, direct care workers such as home care aides and certified nursing assistants (CNAs) will become essential to many more families. Yet these workers tend to be low-paid, poorly trained, and receive little respect. Is such a workforce capable of addressing the needs of our aging population? In Who Will Care for Us? economist Paul Osterman assesses the challenges facing the long-term care industry. He presents an innovative policy agenda that reconceives direct care workers’ work roles and would improve both the quality of their jobs and the quality of elder care.

Using national surveys, administrative data, and nearly 120 original interviews with workers, employers, advocates, and policymakers, Osterman finds that direct care workers are marginalized and often invisible in the health care system. While doctors and families alike agree that good home care aides and CNAs are crucial to the well-being of their patients, the workers report poverty-level wages, erratic schedules, exclusion from care teams, and frequent incidences of physical injury on the job. Direct care workers are also highly constrained by policies that specify what they are allowed to do on the job, and in some states are even prevented from simple tasks such as administering eye drops.

Osterman concludes that broadening the scope of care workers’ duties will simultaneously boost the quality of care for patients and lead to better jobs and higher wages. He proposes integrating home care aides and CNAs into larger medical teams and training them as “health coaches” who educate patients on concerns such as managing chronic conditions and transitioning out of hospitals. Osterman shows that restructuring direct care workers’ jobs, and providing the appropriate training, could lower health spending in the long term by reducing unnecessary emergency room and hospital visits, limiting the use of nursing homes, and lowering the rate of turnover among care workers.

As the Baby Boom generation ages, Who Will Care for Us? demonstrates the importance of restructuring the long-term care industry and establishing a new relationship between direct care workers, patients, and the medical system.

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