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The Effect of Informal Caregiving on Work Productivity Erin Rand-Giovannetti, Jennifer L. Wolff, Ph.D., Kevin D. Frick, Ph.D., Chad Boult, MD, MPH, MBA Presented by: Erin Rand-Giovannetti 9:45am, June 9, 2008.
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The Effect of Informal Caregiving on Work ProductivityErin Rand-Giovannetti, Jennifer L. Wolff, Ph.D., Kevin D. Frick, Ph.D., Chad Boult, MD, MPH, MBAPresented by: Erin Rand-Giovannetti9:45am, June 9, 2008 Supported by the John A. Hartford Foundation, the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, the National Institute on Aging, and the Jacob and Valeria Langeloth Foundation
Background • Majority of long-term care provided by families • Informal caregiving may influence employment • Missed work time – Absenteeism • Reduced productivity – Presenteeism • Measurement Issues • Limited generalizability • Lack of appropriate presenteeism/absenteeism measurement tool
Objectives: • Validate a measure of work productivity loss due to caregiving • Estimate the impact of informal caregiving on workplace productivity.
Methods: Study Sample • Guided Care Study • 308 Caregiver/Patient Dyads • Patients age 65+ in top quartile of risk of health service use • 55% female • Mean age = 79 • Primary caregiver assists with health tasks • 71% female • Mean age = 61 • 45% adult children • Mean hours of care a week = 25 • 61% helped daily
Methods: Work Productivity and Activity Impairment Scale (WPAI-CG) • Are you currently employed? • 40% yes • During the past 7 days how many hours did you miss from work because of your caregiving? • 1.5 hours (4.9% of work time) • On a scale of 0 to 10, during the past 7 days, how did your caregiving affect your productivity while you were at work? • 1.8 (18% reduction in work productivity)
Impact on Work Productivity in Past 7 Days Employed Caregivers Work Time Absenteeism (9%) 38% Productivity loss for impacted caregivers 20% Productivity loss for all employed caregivers No Impairment at Work (48%) Impacted by Caregiving at Work (52%) Productive Time Presenteeism (35%)
Impact on Regular Activities in Past 7 Days • On a scale of 0 to 10, during the past 7 days, how did your caregiving affect your ability to do your daily activities? • 60% reported some impairment • 27% productivity loss
National Impact Policy Level All High-Risk Medicare Patients 9.3 Million (25% of 37 Million) Employer Level Work Time of Caregivers to High-Risk Medicare Patients Absenteeism 5% 20% productivity loss Non-employed caregiver 1.9 Million Employed Caregiver 1.3 Million Presenteeism 19% Productive Time Patients with no caregiver 6.1 Million Equivalent to 250,000 Full Time Employees Lost per Week
Conclusions • The WPAI-CG is a valid for measuring productivity loss due to informal caregiving. • The WPAI-CG is sensitive to care-recipient medical complexity • Work productivity loss ranges from 14%-28% • Regular activity productivity loss ranges from 21-33% • Impact of caregiving is comparable to impact of chronic illness • WPAI-CG is a valuable tool for measuring cost-effectiveness of employer based interventions
Acknowledgements • The guided care team (Sara Palmer, Lisa Reider, Katherine Frey and Tracy Novak) • Johns Hopkins Community Physicians • MedStar • Battelle Centers for Public Health Research • The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services • Kaiser Permanente • Accumen • ResDAC • The University of Minnesota Survey Research Center • The study consultants (Jean Giddens, RN, PhD; Kate Lorig, RN, DrPH; Richard Bohmer, MD, MPH, MBA; Mary Naylor, RN, PhD), • The nurse managers (Lora Rosenthal and Carol Groves), • All of the participating patients, caregivers, physicians, and Guided Care nurses. Please contact Erin Rand-Giovannetti with questionserandgio@jhsph.edu