Survey seeks input from Alaska's informal caregivers
April 26, 2015

Marie Thoms
907-474-7412
4/27/2015
豪华资源 90 percent of long-term, informal health care in the United States is provided by unpaid caregivers, typically women, who spend more than $5,000 annually in out-of-pocket expenses. A survey from the University of Alaska Fairbanks and Fairbanks Memorial Hospital seeks to better identify the strengths and needs of Alaska鈥檚 informal caregivers and to ultimately help them.
鈥淭hese unpaid caregivers are the backbone of our health-care system,鈥 said Ellen Lopez, project leader and public health researcher at the University of Alaska Fairbanks. 鈥淚nformal caregivers need and deserve responsive and accessible support.鈥
According to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, more than 34 million unpaid caregivers provide care to someone age 18 or older who is ill or has a disability, and the majority of caregivers 鈥 83 percent 鈥 are family members. The AARP valued their services in 2009 at $450 billion.
鈥淲e have to find out what caregivers are doing and being asked to do, and how confident they feel doing it,鈥 said Lopez. 鈥淥ur survey asks them about how caregiving is affecting their emotional, physical, spiritual and social health, and we鈥檙e asking what they want and how, where and when they want it.鈥
FMH also wants to know what caregivers want and how the hospital can tailor existing programs and possibly add new programs that better fit caregivers鈥 needs, which in turn helps patients.
鈥淲e鈥檙e definitely interested in the caregiver,鈥 said Corlis Taylor, project partner and head of FMH鈥檚 education department. 鈥淜nowing what can we do to lessen their stress and help the patient and the caregiver manage an illness is very important.鈥
The survey asks caregivers about interacting with physicians and giving medications, what might be considered more Alaska-specific concerns such as wood and water hauling and subsistence activities and things like managing mail, finances and transportation.
鈥淭he survey is for anyone who has been a caregiver in the past or is currently caregiving,鈥 said Lopez. 鈥淚f the caregiver or the person receiving care lived out of Alaska for some period of time, we want to hear from them. A lot of people are giving care from a distance.鈥
Once the survey closes in October 2015, Lopez and FMH will begin assessing the responses and identifying programs and services to help care for the caregivers.
鈥淲e鈥檙e looking forward to seeing what caregivers say,鈥 said Taylor. 鈥淲hat are the things out there that we could be doing that we haven鈥檛 even thought of?"
The Alaska Informal Caregivers Needs Assessment Survey is an online survey that can be accessed at through October 2015. People can also request to conduct the survey with a researcher via telephone. The survey is open to any person 18 years or older who cares for other adults who are experiencing illness, disability or issues of aging 鈥 most often without pay.
For questions or to schedule a telephone survey, contact Ellen Lopez at edlopez@alaska.edu or 907-687-2962.
The Alaska Caregiver Assessment is supported by the University of Alaska Fairbanks, Fairbanks Memorial Hospital, Fairbanks Native Association, Tanana Chiefs Conference and Fairbanks Resource Agency.
ADDITIONAL CONTACTS: Ellen Lopez, University of Alaska Fairbanks, 907-474-7318, edlopez@alaska.edu; Corlis Taylor, Fairbanks Memorial Hospital, 907-458-5585, corlis.taylor@bannerhealth.com
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