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LifeCare® Poll Finds
Majority of Workers Will Be Caregivers Within Next Five
Years
Nearly 80 percent of workers anticipate
caring for older loved ones
SHELTON, CT, December 20, 2007 – The
vast majority of respondents to a new caregiving poll
by LifeCare®, Inc., provider of comprehensive
specialty care services and a longtime leader in the
work/life industry, expect to provide care to older
loved ones at some point within the next five years.
Following are the full results of the poll, which was
posted on LifeCare's private web site during the month
of November and open to employees of its 1,500 client
organizations:
Are you now or do you expect
to be the primary caregiver for an older loved one within
the next five years?
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Yes 77%
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No 9%
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Not sure 14% |
“Obviously, with the aging of the population,
the number of people taking care of older spouses, family
members and other loved ones is going to rise,” said
LifeCare CEO, Peter G. Burki. “For employers, the impact
to productivity and the bottom line could be quite significant.
But employers can definitely prepare for and minimize
these impacts with good caregiver support resources.”
Research estimates that U.S. businesses
lose billions of dollars each year in terms of absenteeism,
turnover, caregiving crises, and lost productivity related
to eldercare alone. But providing employees with resource
and referral services and backup care programs, for
example, can diminish these losses.
Resource and referral services help
working caregivers better understand and plan for their
loved ones' needs, make more informed caregiving decisions,
and more effectively cope with the stress of caregiving.
Backup care programs help people make alternative care
arrangements in advance to avoid missing work when they
can't provide the necessary care themselves or when
their regular care arrangements break down. LifeCare's
Backup Care Connection program offers eldercare solutions
(as well as childcare solutions), provides direct placement
in a facility or with an in-home caregiver, and features
a nationwide network of 75,000 credentialed in-home
caregivers.
Without these kinds of support, says
Burki, many employees become overwhelmed by their caregiving
duties while others are simply forced to arrive at work
late, leave early, take the day off or quit their jobs
altogether. “But these dire consequences are avoidable,”
he adds. “Eldercare support programs can protect an
organization and it working caregivers in so many ways.”
Each month, LifeCare posts a poll on
its private web site, asking individuals to share their
thoughts and opinions on the latest issues and work/life
trends. Past polls have addressed topics such as stress,
health and wellness, aging, flexible work arrangements,
and barriers to on-the-job productivity.
Notes to Editors
Peter G. Burki is available for interview.
About LifeCare®,
Inc.
LifeCare offers cost-saving benefits that help clients
reduce their most pervasive absenteeism and productivity
drains, including child and elder care, caregiving support,
health and wellness issues, and more. For more than
two decades, LifeCare has led the work/life industry
in the creation of high-quality, results-oriented programs
designed to improve organizations' bottom lines. LifeCare
serves 1,500 client companies with 4.5 million individuals
within corporations, health plans, government agencies
and unions. For more information, visit www.lifecare.com.
Media contact: Michael Civiello
LifeCare, Inc.
pr1@lifecare.com
203-291-4170
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