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By Karen
L. Rice, M.A., LNHA Gerontologist, Negotiator, MediatorCaregiving is a rapidly increasing role for families, but it
has been a popular topic of research for years. A critical role found in
families does pertain to care and nurturance. The primary caregiver role
generally falls first on the spouse, then an adult child, usually the daughter.
Love, devotion and loyalty are frequent reasons given by primary caregivers for
taking on the responsibility of care. Yet, studies have shown that a greater
amount of strain results when the caregiver-recipient bond is strong indicating
need for research on family discourse.
Common themes found in the caregiving literature are stress,
burden, and most recently, conflict. Family relationships can provoke conflict;
even more so in caregiving because family structures are so radically altered
by the caregiver role. In the case of caring for Alzheimer's patients, it's the
demand involved in round-the-clock caregiving which challenges the system and
the response. Ultimately, the family's functioning; its physical, emotional,
social, and monetary resources are challenged by caregiving.
As noted in literature on caregiver mediation written by The
Center for Social Gerontology in Ann Arbor, Michigan, "demographics illustrate
the need for effective solutions for addressing and resolving problems that
arise in caregiver situations. According to a recent report by the National Alliance
for Caregiving and AARP, nearly one in four families in the U.S. are involved
in caring for a friend or relative age 50 or older. Of these 22.4 million
families, 41% are also caring for children under 18; almost one-third of the
families provide care to two or more relatives or friends, and 64% of the caregivers are employed and trying to balance
caregiving with work.
Pressures faced by caregivers easily erupt into disputes
with the elder who requires the care or with other family members whom the
caregiver may feel are not carrying their fair share of duties or who may
disagree with the things the caregiver is doing, including how the elders'
money is being managed or spent. TCSG states, "in our extensive work on
these issues, we have seen repeatedly that the pressures and demands of long
term caregiving can, and all too frequently does result in two reactions.
First, family disputes and conflicts get worse over time
with the frail elder person who needs long term care being placed in the middle
of the dispute. Second, petitions are filed, often inappropriately, to place
the elder under guardianship, usually in the false hope that such court- ordered
intervention will enable decisions to be made which will solve what are, in
reality, family caregiver disputes; and with guardianship often being used to
place the elder in a long term care facility, with the resultant loss of home,
autonomy and dignity.
There is little doubt that caregiving is associated with
increased family conflict and with heightened concerns and anxieties about
neglecting other family members. In a report by Toseland others, "the
"paucity" of family interventions to address these conflicts and
anxieties is noted. Toseland et al go on to say that when family members are
willing to participate, family counseling can be effective in addressing these
issues." TCSG's literature notes that a largely unexplored alternative to counseling
or therapy is mediation.
The Center for Social Gerontology was awarded a federal
grant from the Administration on Aging (AoA) and a state grant from the
Michigan Department of Community Health (MDCH) for a local and national
multi-state family caregiver mediation demonstration project which was
implemented last year. Susan Butterwick serves as Directing Attorney for the
Caregiver Mediation Project. She states that mediation is not therapy or
counseling. It is a one-time intervention to help resolve conflict and
facilitate important decision-making in families about the care of an elder
person, and it may be the most effective way of solving the dispute that is
causing so much concern to the family members at the moment.
Mediation provides a unique tool in such cases for elders,
families and caregivers to move beyond impasse into positive decision-making
that meets the needs of all parties, while, in many cases, avoiding costly and
unnecessary long term care services. Family caregiving mediation, like general mediation,
provides a cooperative, non- adversarial setting for families to discuss their
concerns in privacy and with confidentiality. The mediator serves as a neutral
facilitator who has no connection to the case or situation The mediator does
not decide the outcome or determine who is right or wrong; and there is no
force on the disputing parties to reach agreement – it is a consensual process
in which all parties must agree in order to have an agreement. The mediator
listens to the concerns of all the parties and their ideas on how the matter
might be resolved, facilitates the conversation, and helps the parties develop
and agree upon a workable solution themselves.
Under TCSG's demonstration project, the mediators have
undergone additional specialized training in elderly, family, caregiver, and
guardianship issues. Butterwick strongly recommends that mediators who work
with this population take additional training in order to better understand the
issues a mediator encounters when working with families, caregivers and frail
elderly persons. Butterwick says the TCSG three-year demonstration project is
now in its second year. To date, several families have been assisted in
resolving difficult disputes and have reached decisions in mediation concerning
family visitation, living arrangements, home repairs, financial arrangements, caregiver respite, and medical decision-making, care, and
guardianship issues.
Author Karen Rice is a gerontologist, mediator and licensed nursing home
administrator in private practice in dementia care services.
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