Lending a Hand Arizona Caregiver Coalition offers support to families BY LAURA LATZKO Being a caregiver can be physically, emotionally and mentally draining. They aren’t sure where to go if they have questions or need financial help. The nonprofit Arizona Caretaker Coalition helps caregivers by providing services like a resource line, classes, information on support groups and respite care, and supply reimbursement programs. The organization’s services and programs are available to folks throughout Arizona. Executive Director Jutta Ulrich says the organization helps inexperienced caregivers with a lot of questions to seasoned, long-term caregivers. “We are really trying to answer questions for family caregivers who don’t really know where to start and what programs exist,” Ulrich says. Caregivers need support, Ulrich says. If they don’t, they risk becoming isolated or ill. “If help is offered, whether it is a neighbor, family member or somebody, they should really try to accept the help and then really make use of things like a support group or a respite program,” Ulrich says. “People feel guilty. They may think, ‘I’m supposed to do it. I’m the daughter or the spouse.’ Some may be a little bit embarrassed about it. It can be hard to take that first step.” Arizona Caretaker Coalition shares information about navigating insurance or paying cash for private care, programs that pay for care, and the services that are available for veterans. Ulrich says her organization can help caregivers find the services or programs they need. “When people ask us where to find a caregiver, what resources and programs are there, we try to tell them the answers as best as we know. Often, we refer them to other organizations,” Ulrich says. “That’s really important that we try to tell people about these other organizations that are out there. Nobody can do it by themselves. The Area Agency on Aging, they are large, but even they can’t help everybody. So, it’s important that we try to have a good idea of other organizations so
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we can give people some options.” Ulrich says many people often don’t think about caregiving until it is needed. This often happens when a family member breaks a hip or is experiencing memory loss because of a condition such as dementia. She says caregivers need someone to talk with, and she and her staff can provide a listening ear for them. “Once in a while, the phone call can get very long because they either want to tell their story, or sometimes they want to vent. So, you have to really be patient, be empathetic, try to understand what the family is experiencing, and put yourself in their shoes,” Ulrich says. The coalition started in 2014 with a helpline and expanded its caregiver services. The five-person staff is aided by student interns and volunteers, the latter of whom assist with the hotline, data entry and filing. Ulrich says her organization often looks for volunteers who have been caregivers before. “They are very good at explaining things and understanding what others are going through,” Ulrich says. Through its classes, the organization educates caregivers or helps them care for themselves. It stopped offering services, such as CPR and caregiver self-care classes, last year because of the pandemic. Ulrich says that by June, Arizona
Caretaker Coalition should start having in-person CPR and online caregiver education classes. The coalition often works with outside organizations or experts for its classes. The therapeutic writing classes, for example, are taught by a local poet and ASU professor who has been a caregiver. The Arizona Caretaker Coalition helps caregivers acquire respite care funding. As part of a state contract, the coalition offers Lifespan Respite Care Program grant funding and allows for up to 96 hours of respite care in an adult day health center for qualified applicants. Ulrich says caregivers are encouraged to spend time for themselves. “We tell people not to use it all to run errands or do paperwork,” Ulrich says. “We tell them to take a little time to read a book, have lunch with a friend. At the same time, the person they are caring for, most of them really like the day center because there are programs and they meet other people.” Through its respite care program, the coalition also grants vouchers to pay for respite care. Under this program, qualified families can receive up to $599 per calendar year and reapply the next year. Ulrich says the organization can help more than 250 people per year that way. This funding decreased in 2020 because the pandemic forced the closure of many adult day programs. Also, families worried
about their loved ones falling ill. Other organizations, such as Area Agency on Agency and the ALTCS program also offer funding for respite care, but some families don’t qualify. Ulrich says her organization is often able to help. Ulrich says nonprofits like Arizona Caretaker Coalition are especially important. “Somebody will call us and say, ‘I haven’t had a break in two or three years.’ They are very grateful that we can help to pay for a respite worker,” Ulrich says. “We sometimes have to talk them into it. We keep telling them, ‘It’s OK for you to take a half day or full day and just go and do other things. It’s better for your mental health and physical health.” Along with respite care, the organization helps families to get funding for expenses related to caregiving. Through its Family Caregiver Reimbursement Program, the coalition helps pay for home modifications and technology purchased for care of loved ones. This funding can help to cover 50% of costs up to $1,000 for those who qualify. They can apply for funding until they have reached the $1,000 limit and must provide receipts dated after January 1, 2020. It can be used on ramps, roll-under sinks, bedside tables, special bedding, shower handrails and grab bars, hearing aids, wheelchair lifts, bedside commodes, wheelchairs, canes, walkers, crutches, medical alert equipment and voice recognition software. This program debuted last year and served about 130 people. “I think the most common situations are a ramp up to the door or to the shower,” Ulrich says. “For older people, it becomes very hard to climb into a bathtub. So, a lot of people modify their shower to where you can easily walk into the shower or even go in with your walker or your wheelchair.”
Arizona Caregiver Coalition
1-888-737-7494, crl@azcaregiver.org azcaregiver.org www.LovinLife.com