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New
Coalition, the Eldercare Workforce Alliance,
to address the critical shortage of
Healthcare Workers capable of meeting the
unique care needs of Older Adults
WASHINGTON, Feb. 5 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- The Eldercare
Workforce Alliance (EWA) -- a new coalition
of 25 leading organizations representing
older adults and the eldercare workforce,
including family caregivers, healthcare
professionals, and direct-care workers -- is
holding its founding meeting this week in
Washington, D.C.
This wide array of national organizations has joined
together to address the critical shortage of
health care providers and caregivers who are
adequately prepared to meet the unique care
needs of older adults.
To accomplish this, the Alliance supports programs to
increase workforce capacity, strengthen
workers' competencies, and improve
coordination of care.
The Alliance was formed in direct response to a
groundbreaking report released in the spring
of 2008 by the Institute of Medicine (IOM),
which concluded that America's eldercare
workforce is dangerously understaffed and
unprepared to care for the rapidly growing
number of older adults in the U.S.
The IOM report, Retooling for an Aging America: Building
the Health Care Workforce, explained that by
2030, the number of Americans 65 or older
will nearly double to 77 million, and
roughly 20 percent of these adults will have
five or more chronic health problems.
At the same time, there are serious anticipated shortfalls
across the eldercare workforce of
professionals and direct care workers.
"Eldercare is projected to be the fastest-growing
employment sector in the healthcare
industry, and strengthening these caregiving
fields is essential to quality of care for
older adults in America and may also drive
long-term employment and economic growth,"
said Alice H. Hedt, who was named EWA
Project Director during the Alliance's D.C.
meeting.
Further limiting older Americans' access to quality of
care, both direct-care workers and the
family caregivers who provide countless
hours of care are inadequately trained and
prepared, according to the IOM report.
In immediate response to the eldercare workforce crisis,
the Alliance is proposing to:
-- Strengthen the direct-care workforce through better
training, supervision and improved
compensation;
-- Address clinician and faculty shortages, through
incentives such as
loan forgiveness, increased public funding for training,
and better compensation;
-- Ensure a competent workforce by encouraging agencies
and organizations
that certify and regulate the eldercare workforce to
require demonstrated and continued
competence; and
-- Redesign health care delivery by adopting
cost-effective care coordination
models.
"EWA's goal is to develop practical solutions that will
build a caring and competent workforce
providing high-quality, culturally
sensitive, person-directed, and
family-focused care for America's elders,"
said Ms. Hedt, who has more than 25 years of
experience designing, advocating for, and
implementing innovative eldercare programs.
Most recently she was the Executive Director of NCCNHR: The
National Consumer Voice for Quality
Long-Term Care.
The Alliance will be partnering with older adults and their
family members as well as national
organizations to work with the Obama
Administration and Congress to effect
changes that improve health care and care
for America's elders.
The Atlantic Philanthropies and the John A. Hartford
Foundation provided funds for the
development of the Alliance, and Atlantic
has committed one million dollars for
Alliance activities.
To highlight the importance of strengthening both the
professional health care workforce and the
direct-care workforce, EWA has appointed
Steven L. Dawson, president of PHI, and
Nancy Lundebjerg, Chief Operating Officer of
the American Geriatrics Society,
co-conveners of the Alliance.
PHI is a national nonprofit working to improve the quality
of eldercare and disability services by
supporting quality jobs for direct-care
workers.
The American Geriatrics Society is a national nonprofit
that brings together health professionals
devoted to improving the health,
independence and quality of life of all
older people.
About the Eldercare Workforce Alliance
The Eldercare Workforce Alliance is a group of 25 national
organizations, joined together to address
the immediate and future workforce crisis in
caring for an aging America.
The Alliance is a Project of the Tides Center and the Tides
Advocacy Fund. Alliance members believe
that:
-- An essential step in addressing our fragmented health
and long-term care system is to adopt care
models that provide well-coordinated,
person-directed and family-focused services
across settings.
-- All unpaid caregivers -- including family, friends
and other caregivers--should be supported
and have opportunities to acquire the needed
skills, knowledge, and information to care
appropriately for older adults.
-- Resolving the workforce crisis requires addressing
recruitment,
retention, training and compensation issues across the
direct-care and
professional health care workforce -- which is essential to
improve the quality of care and quality of
life for older adults.
About The Atlantic Philanthropies
The Atlantic Philanthropies are dedicated to bringing about
lasting changes in the lives of
disadvantaged and vulnerable people.
Atlantic focuses on four critical social problems: Aging,
Disadvantaged Children & Youth, Population
Health, and Reconciliation & Human Rights.
Programs funded by Atlantic operate in Australia, Bermuda,
Northern Ireland, the Republic of Ireland,
South Africa, the United States and Viet
Nam. To learn more, please visit:
www.atlanticphilanthropies.org.
About the John A. Hartford Foundation
Founded in 1929, the John A. Hartford Foundation is a
committed champion of training, research and
service system innovations that promote the
health and independence of America's older
adults.
Through its grantmaking, the Foundation seeks to strengthen
the nation's capacity to provide effective,
affordable care to this rapidly increasing
older population by educating
"aging-prepared" health professionals
(physicians, nurses, social workers), and
developing innovations that improve and
better integrate health and supportive
services.
The Foundation was established by John A. Hartford. Mr.
Hartford and his brother, George L.
Hartford, both former chief executives of
the Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Company,
left the bulk of their estates to the
Foundation upon their deaths in the 1950s.
Additional information about the Foundation and it programs
is available on our Web site
www.jhartfound.org.
MEMBERS OF THE ELDERCARE WORKFORCE ALLIANCE
-- AARP
-- Alzheimer's Association
-- American Academy of Nursing
-- American Association for Geriatric Psychiatry
-- American Association of Homes and Services for the
Aging
-- American Geriatrics Society
-- American Medical Association
-- American Medical Directors Association
-- American Nurses Association
-- American Psychological Association
-- American Society of Consultant Pharmacists
-- American Society on Aging
-- Coalition of Geriatric Nursing Organizations
-- Council on Social Work Education
-- Direct Care Alliance
-- Family Caregiver Alliance
-- Gerontological Society of America
-- National Alliance for Caregiving
-- National Council on Aging
-- National Hispanic Council on Aging
-- NCCNHR: The National Consumer Voice for Quality
Long-term Care
-- NCB Capital Impact/THE GREEN HOUSE(R) Project
-- New York Academy of Medicine/Social Work Leadership
Institute
-- PHI
-- Visiting Nurse Associations of America
Source:
American Geriatrics Society
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