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A Silent Crisis: Working
Caregivers
Are Begging For Help
By Gema G. Hernandez, D.P.A.
At time when private enterprises are trying to increase
productivity, reduce costs and enhance the quality of
their products or services there is a growing crisis in
corporations today that is preventing them from
achieving their corporate goals. Few companies
realize the implications working caregivers have on
their internal costs and their bottom line. Still fewer
companies even know where to look for these hidden
costs. Only one in seventy midsize to larger
companies knows how to address this issue.
The closest thing a company associates with the cost of
caregiving to the company is the absenteeism reports.
Even in cases where absenteeism is recorded, the
relationship between the numbers of days missed by
workers and the reason for the number of days is not
clearly established. Absenteeism may be the most
obvious cost to the workforce, but it is not the only
cost or the most expensive cost. Other factors
such as attrition, loss of good workers, increased
health insurance coverage, overtime, and constant
recruitment of new workers also cost the company and the
workers.
The number of caregivers in the workforce has increased
threefold in the last five years and will continue to
increase in the next ten years. What we are seeing today
is only the beginning and unless companies begin to help
their working caregivers they themselves will not be
able to keep their competitive advantage in the global
economy. This is no longer a problem that affects
only women in the workforce or lower income workers, but
is a problem that exists at the CEO level as well as the
lower administrative levels of the company echelon. This
is a problem that also affects working men, and young
and older workers alike. For years the
problem has been handled by the mid level managers who
have used leniency in granting permission for workers to
leave early, come late, refuse to work overtime and
while the managers have done their best to help good
workers balance jobs and work the poor workers have been
left alone to tackle the problem. For years the problem
has been handled silently by the working caregiver who
has given up promotions, careers, training opportunities
to provide care to a family member. But these individual
solutions are no longer appropriate or recommended.
The first sign of relief for working caregivers came
with the passage of the Family Leave Act which allows
workers to take time off to care for a frail family
member. This law helps working caregivers by
guaranteeing their jobs while they take unpaid leave to
care for the family member. But it does nothing to
educate, facilitate, support and provide the necessary
assistance to working caregivers after the crisis
situation ends. It does nothing for the company
which loses a valuable worker on a temporary basis and
is replaced by a not so experienced worker. Many working
caregivers have forfeited this unpaid leave option
because of the unbearable financial burden giving up a
paycheck represents to them and even though they needed
the time off they were not able to afford it. Many
working caregivers are not even aware of the law that
protect them from losing their jobs.
Many working caregivers have given up a job at a
financial cost to be borne by them alone for years to
come. Financial costs in the form of a lower
pension or no pension at all, lower social security at
the time of retirement and the loss of a job at a time
in their lives when finding another job becomes almost
impossible.
We have reached a point in the road that something
should be done. On one hand government can pass a law to
financially support the Family Leave Act by mandating
that employers with more than 50 workers offer at least
a portion of the time off with pay. California is
the first state in the nation that has passed such a
law. On the other hand, companies are requesting
that the Mandates of the Family Leave Act be weakened in
the form of less time off or plain dismissal. This
is not going to solve the core problem, on the contrary,
it will produce more absenteeism, loss of good workers
and increases in health care coverage resulting from
higher health claims by working caregivers.
The solution from the point of view of the working
caregivers and from the financial perspective of the
company is one and the same. That mutually
beneficial solution is for companies to include in their
benefit package a working caregiver assistance program.
Those companies that have done it have achieved a higher
degree of worker satisfaction, reduced attrition of good
workers, have increased the quality of their products
and services and kept the loyalty and goodwill of their
workforce. For working caregivers this has been
the answer to their prayers. They no longer have
to miss work, come late, leave early, be on an infinite
number of phone calls or spend their entire working day
worried about mother, father, or husband at home.
In my years helping working caregivers have found that a
successful caregiver support program goes beyond
information and provides intervention, services and
ongoing support tailored to the needs of each individual
caregiver. I have also found that if
corporations see this as an imposition, not as a quality
control measure, they will never make the investment in
the program. It is up to us caregivers to make the
corporate world aware of our needs and to support
efforts that will alleviate our ongoing burden.
Contact your human resource department and find out what
they offer in terms of working caregivers, and if they
don’t, let them know that assistance exists to support
corporations to deal with this challenging and growing
crisis.
For corporations to maintain their competitive advantage
in the global market they need dedicated and experience
workers willing to give 120% to their jobs this is
achievable is they now that corporations are willing to
help with their family caregiving responsibilities.
The rewards are there for companies that provide
assistance to the working caregivers. This is an
investment that at the end will save money and generate
goodwill for all.
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