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Types of Caregivers: How to Find the Right Kind of Caregiver

 In this article, we’ll cover six different types of caregivers and how their respective duties differ from each other. In-Home Caregivers If you’re looking for an in-home caregiver for yourself or a loved one, you should know there are different types. In-home caregivers provide services for the differing stages of caregiving a client requires. Below, we’ll break down the most common types of caregivers for in-home services. Family Caregivers Family caregivers are usually unpaid family members who take care of a spouse or loved one. These caregivers are almost always related to the person receiving care in some way. It is possible to have some of your caregiving expenses reimbursed, but on average, about 21% of all caregivers work unpaid. That said, you may become a paid family caregiver by working with a home caregiving agency. JEVS offers the highest market pay rates plus full benefits for their caregivers. Find our caregiver career opportunities here. Independent Caregivers An ...

Stealing From The Vulnerable

  There was a case of a woman with dementia, an only child, living all by herself, her neighbors do what they can to support her and be there for her. Even though there was a Homecare agency involved in her care, their part was minimal. Her neighbors went as far as taking her lawyer and a social worker to court, for mismanagement and were fighting to bar her only relative, (a cousin who they claimed cashed her checks and used the money to buy himself a house) out of her life.  I have also heard cases of caregivers stealing from their vulnerable clients, but fiduciary stealing from a client, came as a surprise. According to Wikipedia, a fiduciary is a person who holds a legal or ethical relationship of trust with one or more parties, fiduciary duties in a financial sense exist to ensure those who manage other People’s money act in their beneficiaries’ interest, rather than serving their own.

Don't Argue With Your Clients

I heard about an argument between a caregiver and a dementia patient, the caregiver was offended because the patient asked for additional salt in her meal. The caregiver that was involved felt that she was on the right, her explanation was that, she knew she cooks bland but was sure to have added enough salt in the Client’s meal. From what I learned, this led to a hefty misunderstanding between the two. What I would do in such a situation is to bring the shaker and add few drops of salt to the meal, and then ask with a smile, if the food taste better. When I was in school back in Germany training to be a Geriatric Nurse, we were taught over and over again, ways  to deal with any situation that may arise when dealing with a dementia patient, and one of it was a method introduced by an American woman, who gives lectures all over Germany. People swore by this method, My experience was that it didn’t always work. And that’s because it isn’t a one for all method, none is. Working as a ...