2021
DOI: 10.1001/jamahealthforum.2021.2671
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Association Between New-Onset Medicaid Home Care and Family Caregivers’ Health

Abstract: IMPORTANCE More than 17 million people in the US provide uncompensated care for adults with physical or cognitive limitations. Such caregiving is associated with worse mental and physical health, yet little research has investigated how publicly funded home care might ameliorate these harms. OBJECTIVE To investigate the association between Medicaid home care services and family caregivers' health. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS This longitudinal cohort study used data from the 1996 to 2017 Medical Expenditu… Show more

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Cited by 8 publications
(7 citation statements)
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“…56 Consistent evidence has also shown that PA restriction may increase the risk of cardiovascular outcomes 57 and that the frequency of activity restriction is associated with poorer physical health (e.g., higher blood pressure levels) when the caregiver is subjected to high care burden. 54 Unlike changes in caregivers' mental health, that occur rapidly following changes in burden, 58 physical health changes occur over the years, 9 do not improve after the onset of home care services, 3,20,59 persist after the death of the care recipient, 9 and are risk factors for mortality. 11 Thus, the negative impact of burden on cardiovascular complaints may be mitigated in caregivers because regular PA prevents or delays the adverse cardiovascular outcomes.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…56 Consistent evidence has also shown that PA restriction may increase the risk of cardiovascular outcomes 57 and that the frequency of activity restriction is associated with poorer physical health (e.g., higher blood pressure levels) when the caregiver is subjected to high care burden. 54 Unlike changes in caregivers' mental health, that occur rapidly following changes in burden, 58 physical health changes occur over the years, 9 do not improve after the onset of home care services, 3,20,59 persist after the death of the care recipient, 9 and are risk factors for mortality. 11 Thus, the negative impact of burden on cardiovascular complaints may be mitigated in caregivers because regular PA prevents or delays the adverse cardiovascular outcomes.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These observations may be attributed to the palliative care teams’ effectiveness in identifying families’ needs and risks at admission to the service and shoring up the necessary in-home supports in alignment with the families’ goals of care. Large-scale, prospective studies are needed to determine the optimal ‘dose’ of material in-home support to strained caregivers to help individuals living with serious illness spend more days at home and to improve caregiver physical and mental well-being 34. Finally, it is important for future studies that examine associations between caregiver factors and patient utilisation of hospital-based services account for other home and community-based health service families may be receiving as caregiver factors may be more or less associated with patient outcomes depending on the context.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Paid caregiving may be inaccessible to people with relatively limited economic resources, and patients may need to rely on uncompensated caregiving from family or friends; such factors may cause physical, financial, and emotional strain to both patients and caregivers. 21 Considering that caregivers must actively monitor the patient for treatment-related adverse events, patients need access to reliable caregivers; however, caregivers may experience financial hardship through loss of earnings if financial support or protected medical leave is not provided through their employers. 20,22 Finally, vein-to-vein time (the time between collection of T cells to CAR-T infusion) is typically 3-5 weeks, allowing time for manufacturing and quality assessment.…”
Section: Impact Of the Car-t Administration Process On Patient Accessmentioning
confidence: 99%