Friday, August 15, 2008

Long-Term Care Workers Struggle With Elderly Population Boom

As America's aging population increases, so does its need for long-term
care. And the workers who provide these services often lack the support
they need
- particularly in the area of pay and work relationships,
according to "Better Jobs Better Care: New Research on the Long-Term Care Workforce," the latest special issue of The Gerontologist (Volume
48, Special Issue 1). Those aged 65 and older are projected to
represent at least 20 percent of the total U.S. population by 2030,
with the number of those 85-and-older increasing the most. The growth
of this demographic will have a major effect on the demand for and
supply of long-term care services.


Better Jobs Better Care (BJBC) was the nation's largest single
initiative created to reduce the high vacancy and turnover rates of
direct care workers and improve workforce quality through both policy
and practice changes.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Oh, and this is just the beginning! I am selling long term care insurance Toronto so I am bit insider and I can tell you, when babyboomers will start coming to retirement in the next few years, we can expect BIG problems with long term care (at least here in Canada). Lack of nursing homes, lack of staff - this will lead to really big expense jump. Hope the market will react before it's too late...
Take care
Lorne