While nationally 1 in 4 households provide care for
an older adult, in Kent County, that number is 1 in 3 households.
This arrangement has blessings, to be sure, but it also has costs:
35% of caregivers end up leaving paid work to care for a parent,
resulting in lost wages, social security and retirement contributions.
Not to mention hours lost while the caregiver is still employed.
It’s also easy to imagine the conflicts
that can arise between family members due to stress, guilt, and
the financial burden. When you add lack of communication between
siblings into the mix, the stress-level rises still more.
Family Harmony
One of the best ways to take care of this situation before it becomes
a problem is to establish a Caregiver Contract. It may seem excessive
to put a contract in place, but it puts all the issues in the open
when there is no crisis so the entire family can work together to
establish a game plan to help the parents as they move through their
life and need growing levels of care from family members.
What’s in a Caregiver Contract?
Who will be the initial caregiver?
Who will be second in line—in case the
initial caregiver is no longer able or willing to serve?
What services will the caregiver provide?
How will the caregiver be compensated?
• options include hourly fee, monthly stipend, lump sum for
every year of service, additional bequest in the parent’s will.
How will the family communicate about their
parents’ care
issues?
• monthly telephone conferences, written reports or family
meals are preferred to reliance on email.
How will conflicts with the caregiver be resolved (aka: how can
the caregiver be fired)?
• proper planning helps families avoid squabbles and expensive
probate court disputes
Our Elder Law attorney, Brian J. Plachta, is a member of the National Association of Elder Law Attorneys. He knows, through both training and personal experience, the stress that disagreements about care for senior family members can produce. Please call 616-458-3994 to begin the conversation. |