Wisconsin Faces Critical Shortage of Care Workers for Disabled & Elderly

Wisconsin Faces Critical Shortage of Care Workers for Disabled & Elderly.

Wisconsin Faces Critical Shortage of Care Workers for Disabled & Elderly.

MADISON – Jessica Nell relies on a stranger to help her get in and out of bed every day.  If no one shows up to help her, the 29-year-old Green Bay resident is left immobile — potentially for hours.  Nell, who has cerebral palsy and uses a motorized wheelchair, is one of thousands of Wisconsin residents who need personal care and home care workers to perform daily tasks they can’t do on their own. But finding a worker to come to an individual’s home has become increasingly difficult in Wisconsin due to a lack of available workers.  “There’s constant issues. People not showing up, people showing up at the wrong time,” Nell said. “It’s endless.”

The lack of workers has reached crisis levels in Wisconsin and across the nation, according to long-term care and home care organizations. And Gov. Scott Walker has recommended a 2% increase for each of the next two years, but advocates say more is needed.  A recent survey by disability advocates found that 85% of disabled people and older adults didn’t have enough workers to cover all their shifts. More than 40% of the 500 people surveyed couldn’t find a worker seven or more times a month, according to the review by Survival Coalition, a collection of disability organizations. 

Advocates and health associations have pinpointed low wages without benefits as the cause of the shortage. There’s also an overall lack of appreciation for workers who fill these demanding jobs, they say, leading workers to not view the job as a career.

The workers help with showering, getting dressed, cooking, cleaning, driving and other tasks. Often they are paid through Medicaid, a collection of health care programs funded by the state and federal governments.  Personal care workers typically get paid $10 to $11 an hour, usually without health care benefits, to perform the challenging job of lifting people in and out of bed and helping them with toileting needs, according to Kevin Fech, a team manager with a state personal care program.  “These are the hardest working people and they get paid less than what people make at a fast-food restaurant,” Nell said.

Agencies that manage these workers sometimes lose over half their staff in a year, experiencing a turnover rate of 50%, according to the Wisconsin Personal Services Association, which represents personal care providers.  At the Arc of Fond du Lac — one of the state’s largest care providers for people with developmental and intellectual disabilities — the turnover rate has increased from 5% to 25% in recent years.  David Boelter, executive director at the Arc, has taken steps to retain and recruit high-quality workers in the midst of the shortage. The Arc offers employee referral rewards, sign-on bonuses and health care benefits.  “The more turnover we have on our staff the worse effect it has on our clients,” Boelter said.

Some people employ a friend or relative to provide services.  Fech gets $10 an hour to care for Tyler, his 19-year-old son who has autism, Down syndrome and is nonverbal.

Fech believes it is the best option to provide the care for his son himself because it would be challenging to find a care worker to come at 6 a.m. to get Tyler ready for school at $10 an hour. If a worker was late or didn’t show up, Tyler wouldn’t get to school on time.  Personal hygiene suffers when care workers don’t show up.  “My son doesn’t have the cognitive ability to brush his teeth,” Fech said. “If we weren’t there to help him  brush his teeth … then (he) would start having gum disease and start having abscessed teeth.”

Increase possible

State Rep. Jimmy Anderson (D-Fitchburg) said he once talked to a woman with multiple sclerosis who had to decide if she wanted to shower or eat each day during her Medicaid-funded hour of care because of state cutbacks.  “I think it’s inhumane. It’s damn near disgusting,” Anderson said.  Anderson became paralyzed from the chest down after a serious car accident. He is not on Medicaid, so he pays out of pocket for home health care workers.

Under current law, service providers, like the Arc, get reimbursed through Medicaid at a rate of $16.08 per hour. Walker’s proposed 2% budget increase would raise the rate to $16.40 in 2017-’18 and $16.73 in 2018-’19.  Advocates, although grateful for any increase at all, say the bump is not enough to make any real change. A better rate increase would be around 15%, they say.  “It’s a step in the right direction but still very inadequate,” Boelter said.

Lillian Price, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel  July 21, 20178


Note from TheLongTermCareGuy.com:

It’s only going to get worse.  Medicaid cannot pay more, there are not enough workers, and those who can pay more for care will get care.  I have long-term care insurance, do you?  Get it while healthy – in your fifties is best.  When you have the income or insurance to pay for care, you can pay enough to get good care.  You wouldn’t go without car insurance, why go without this?  HHS says that by 65 we have a 70% chance of needing long-term care.  Do you want to be against those odds?  Call us to investigate options (920) 884-3030

 

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2 Comments

  1. lori j burks on November 28, 2017 at 3:09 am

    how can i go so i can get to be a care provider in my own home to take care of an adult with disabilitys , also find out how i can get a house that will be good enough for that to happen ????? plez hit me back



    • Romeo Raabe on December 15, 2017 at 5:34 pm

      There are no specific requirements of who can be a caregiver. You simply need to be able to deliver the care that is needed. However, if someone does hire you (consider telling your local ADRC or senior center you will do this) be sure to tell them that they need to write a simple employment contract of what cares, for how much money, you both sign and date and it must be notarized. If this is not done, and the person needing care later needs to apply for Medicaid to pay for care, every payment to you will be counted as a gift, thus disqualifying them from receiving Medicaid. If you have more questions email me at [email protected] or call me at 800 219 9203