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Exploring Family Caregiver Services: Variations in Utilization Patterns and Barriers to Access among Diverse Ethnic Groups Julian Chow 1, Erica Auh 1, Nancy Giunta 1, and Andrew Scharlach 1 1 Center for the Advanced Study of Aging Services - University of California, Berkeley Annual Meeting of the Society for Social Work and Research Miami, FL, January 14, 2005
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Center for the Advanced Study of Aging Services Mission: Improving services for the elderly through research, collaboration and education Current projects include: Strategic Plan for an Aging CA (SB910) Family Caregiver Support Program LTC Insurance and Quality Assurance LTC Integration and Case Management Consortium for Social Work Training in Aging
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Overview Literature Review Research Questions Method Results Discussion & Implication
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Literature Review Lower level of formal service use among minority CGs compared with White CGs (yet, inconclusive) Disparities in types of formal service use between minority and White CGs Comparison between White and non-White CGs in most studies
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Research Questions Do racial/ethnic CGs use services differently from White? Do racial/ethnic groups rely on different sources of service? Do they use different types of services? How do they see barriers to service use?
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Method Random Digit Dialing Respondent caring for someone over age 50 Surveys conducted in English and Spanish Interview lasted approx. 30 minutes N = 1,643
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Demographic ANHPIHispanicAfrican AmericanWhite Female73%76%80%74% Gender (n=1,559) Age** (n=1, 529) Under 3518%27%19%8% 35 - 4946%41%34%28% 50 - 6434%24%39%40% 65 +3%8%21%25% * p<0.05; ** p<0.01
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Demographics (cont’d) Marital Status** (n=1,435) ANHPIHispanicAfrican AmericanWhite Married65%58%33%64% Living w/ partner0%4%2% Separated0%3%7%2% Divorced6%12%22%12% Widowed1%3%8%9% Never Married28%22%28%12% Children < 18 Living in Household** (n=1,555) Yes41%47%36%24%
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Demographics (cont’d) Education** (n=1,552) ANHPIHispanicAfrican AmericanWhite < High school0%15%1%2% Some high school3%10%9%4% High school graduate16%23% 20% Post high school education19%29%40%36% College graduate43%18%21%25% Post graduate degree19%5%6%14% 2001 Household Income** (n=1,359) < $30,00032%53%52%35% $30,000 +68%47%48%65%
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Demographics (cont’d) Country of Origin** (n=1,323) ANHPIHispanicAfrican AmericanWhite USA34%67%96% Canada0% 1% Mexico0%25%0% Europe0% 2% South America0%2%0% Middle East0% 1%0% Asia/Pacific Island49%0% Indian Subcontinent14%0% Central America0%6%2%0% Other3%0%
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Total Number of Service Use ANHPIHispanicAfrican American WhiteTotal Used no service21%20%13%17%18% Used at least one service 79%80%87%83%82% Mean number of total service use** 2.09332.09272.89692.51372.4096 Range (min:max)8(0:8)9(0:9)8(0:8)10(0:10) * p<0.05; ** p<0.01
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Result of Post Hoc Test (Tukey HSD) ANHPIHispanic African American White ANHPI-0.8036* Hispanic-0.8042**-0.4209** African American * p<0.05; ** p<0.01
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Formal & Informal Service Use ANHPIHispanic African American WhiteTotal Used at least one FORMAL service** 57%65%77%72%70% Used at least one INFORMAL service* 66%59%58%52%55% * p<0.05; ** p<0.01
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Ratio of Formal and Informal within One’s Service Use** ANHPIHispanic African American WhiteTotal FORMAL only26%36%34%45%41% INFORMAL only34%22%14%15%18% Both40%42%51%40%41% * p<0.05; ** p<0.01
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Service Use by Type ANHPIHispanic African American WhiteTotal Information**28%19%34%29%27% Access17%10%6%11% Education*20%28%42%28%29% Counseling11% 12%14%13% Counseling from clergy4%18%21%18%17% Support group**19%20%18%23%22% * p<0.05; ** p<0.01
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Service Use by Type (cont’d) ANHPIHispanic African American WhiteTotal In-home respite*42%39%41%32%35% Day respite7% 16%11%10% Night respite*10%9%15%12%11% Legal information**15%16%29%27%23% Financial information*23%13%20% 18% * p<0.05; ** p<0.01
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Service Use by Source ANHPIHispanic African American WhiteTotal In-home respite** formal informal 30% 70% 19% 81% 18% 82% 37% 63% 30% 70% Night respite** formal informal 0% 100% 31% 69% 43% 57% 54% 46% 47% 53% * p<0.05; ** p<0.01
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Barriers to Service Use ANHPIHispanic African American WhiteTotal Already have all the help needed** 69%63% 75%70% Help not wanted by CR44%42%37%41% Service not available**26%42%34%28%33% Poor quality**17%37%40%21%27% Language**35%25%11%9%15% No one to stay with CR while CG gets help* 17%30%23%25%26% * p<0.05; ** p<0.01
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Barriers to Service Use (cont’d) * p<0.05; ** p<0.01 ANHPIHispanic African American WhiteTotal No time to get help39%23%17%25% Not available the times they need** 22%38%34%20%26% Transportation not available** 30%24%14%23% High cost**30%53%49%46%47% Service not offered by people like them* 17%24%29%19%21%
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Discussion Ethnic differences in total number of service use Differences in sources Some groups are more likely to rely on one source
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Discussion (cont’d) Different ethnic groups use different types of services In-home respite, education, and information are most widely used across group But sources of help seem to matter Ethnic groups identify different barriers
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Implication Provide culturally specific services Outreach to minority, especially immigrant, communities Provide resources for the informal support network
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Thank You! Center for the Advanced Study of Aging Services University of California, Berkeley http://cssr.berkeley.edu/aging
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