Posted by: Bert Copple | April 16, 2008

Study Shows Sandwich Generation Women Don’t Know Where to Go For Help

By Tina Rowley, R.N., C.S.A., from the Home Instead Senior Care office in Birmingham, Michigan. 

Q. I’m the mother of three teenagers who is working full-time and trying to help care for my 80-year-old parents.  I’m near the end of my rope.  What can I do?

Know that you’re not alone.  A study of social workers who provide services to sandwich generation women – those between the ages of 35 and 54 – found that nearly half say they delay getting help because they feel they should be able to shoulder caregiving responsibilities on their own.

Commissioned by the New York Academy of Medicine (NYAM) and the National Association of Social Workers (NASW), the report, “Not Ready for Prime Time: The Needs of Sandwich Generation Women, A National Survey of Social Workers” (press release online at http://www.nyam.org/news/3057.html)  explores the challenges faced by some 42 million American women who are sandwiched by the needs of their own children and their aging relatives.

Of the more than 1,400 social workers surveyed, the majority reported that sandwich generation women are not prepared for many aspects of their aging relatives’ care.  Of the sandwich generation women who participated in a journaling project that was part of the study, nearly 24 percent say they didn’t know who to ask for help with day-to-day caregiving responsibilities.

“As our society’s demographics shift, older women will increasingly find themselves shouldering heavier caregiving burdens, but they don’t have to do it alone,” said Pat Volland, director of NYAM’s Social Work Leadership Institute. “Unfortunately, there are barriers to seeking help because women think they should be self-reliant and able to handle it all. And they often don’t know that health professionals like social workers can help with daily stresses.”

Personal and home care aides, like those employed by Home Instead Senior Care, also are an option.  Home Instead CAREGivers are screened, trained, bonded and insured.  They can be hired for as little as three hours and up to 24 hours to provide companionship, meal preparation, light housekeeping, errands and shopping.  These are many of the tasks that you probably are having trouble fitting into your schedule.

What’s even better is that home care aides are often seniors themselves who can relate to the interests and lifestyles of your parents.

For more information about Home Instead Senior Care, contact Bert Copple at 248-203-2273 or visit www.homeinstead.com/283 .  For more about the study above, visit http://www.nyam.org/news/3057.html.

 

 

  

Responses

I was 39 when I started caring for my mom full-time. She had had Parkinson’s for years, and although she was a widow, she had managed to stay pretty independent (with the aid of her neighbors, church, community, and my family) for many years. But when Alzheimer’s hit, I knew I had to intervene.

Yes, I knew more about local ballet lessons and SAT prep classes than I did about caregiving, DNRs, durable power of attorneys, and hospice–but you learn. There are many great resources out there, but it is a tangled web of finding out what’s in your county/state, what you’re entitled to, that there are tiers of care, and finding what your insurance supplements and what it doesn’t. It takes a while to get acclamated to the “world of caregiving,” and the difficult part is that you are still your children’s mom and you might need to keep your job–and what about your marriage?
Women (and men) of the sandwich generation have more on their plate than they can possibly fit.
Every doctor’s office, library, insurance company, and home health program should have adult care information at their finger tips to offer families in need. We need this information everywhere–

~Carol D. O’Dell
Author of Mothering Mother: A Daughter’s Humorous and Heartbreaking Memoir

available on Amazon
http://www.mothering-mother.com

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