1 / 13

Background

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.

shayla
Download Presentation

Background

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. 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

  2. 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

  3. Objectives: • Validate a measure of work productivity loss due to caregiving • Estimate the impact of informal caregiving on workplace productivity.

  4. 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

  5. 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)

  6. 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%)

  7. 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

  8. Validation of WPAI-CG

  9. Validation of WPAI-CG

  10. 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

  11. Caregiving vs. Chronic Illness

  12. 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

  13. 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

More Related