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Millions now manage aging parents' care from afar

Thu Jan 26, 2012 12:25 PM EST
health, us, aging, america, distance, caregiving, long-distance, kristy-bryner
Matt Sedensky, Associated Press
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showing 1 of 4 photos
<p>Lynn Feinberg, a caregiver expert at AARP, works in her office on Thursday, Jan. 26, 2012 in Washington. As lifespans lengthen and the number of seniors rapidly grows, more Americans find themselves struggling to care for an ailing loved one from hundreds or thousands of miles away. Feinberg said the number of long-distance caregivers is likely to grow, particularly as a sagging economy has people taking whatever job they can get, wherever it is.    (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)</p>

Lynn Feinberg, a caregiver expert at AARP, works in her office on Thursday, Jan. 26, 2012 in Washington. As lifespans lengthen and the number of seniors rapidly grows, more Americans find themselves struggling to care for an ailing loved one from hundreds or thousands of miles away. Feinberg said the number of long-distance caregivers is likely to grow, particularly as a sagging economy has people taking whatever job they can get, wherever it is. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)

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WEST PALM BEACH — Kristy Bryner worries her 80-year-old mom might slip and fall when she picks up the newspaper, or that she'll get in an accident when she drives to the grocery store. What if she has a medical emergency and no one's there to help? What if, like her father, her mother slips into a fog of dementia?

Those questions would be hard enough if Bryner's aging parent lived across town in Portland, Ore., but she is in Kent, Ohio. The stress of caregiving seems magnified by each of the more than 2,000 miles that separate them.

"I feel like I'm being split in half between coasts," said Bryner, 54. "I wish I knew what to do, but I don't."

As lifespans lengthen and the number of seniors rapidly grows, more Americans find themselves in Bryner's precarious position, struggling to care for an ailing loved one from hundreds or thousands of miles away.

The National Institute on Aging estimates around 7 million Americans are long-distance caregivers. Aside from economic factors that often drive people far from their hometowns, shifting demographics in the country could exacerbate the issue: Over the next four decades, the share of people 65 and older is expected to rapidly expand while the number of people under 20 will roughly hold steady. That means there will be a far smaller share of people between 20 and 64, the age group that most often is faced with caregiving.

"You just want to be in two places at once," said Kay Branch, who lives in Anchorage, Alaska, but helps coordinate care for her parents in Lakeland, Fla., about 3,800 miles away.

There are no easy answers.

Bryner first became a long-distance caregiver when, more than a decade ago, her father began suffering from dementia, which consumed him until he died in 2010. She used to be able to count on help from her brother, who lived close to their parents, but he died of cancer a few years back. Her mother doesn't want to leave the house she's lived in for so long.

So Bryner talks daily with her mother via Skype, a video telephone service. She's lucky to have a job that's flexible enough that she's able to visit for a couple of weeks every few months. But she fears what may happen when her mother is not as healthy as she is now.

"Someone needs to check on her, someone needs to look out for her," she said. "And the only someone is me, and I don't live there."

Many long-distance caregivers say they insist on daily phone calls or video chats to hear or see how their loved one is doing. Oftentimes, they find another relative or a paid caregiver they can trust who is closer and able to help with some tasks.

Yet there always is the unexpected: Medical emergencies, problems with insurance coverage, urgent financial issues. Problems become far tougher to resolve when you need to hop on a plane or make a daylong drive.

"There are lots of things that you have to do that become these real exercises in futility," said Ed Rose, 49, who lives in Boston but, like his sister, travels frequently to Chicago to help care for his 106-year-old grandmother, Blanche Seelmann.

Rose has rushed to his grandmother's side for hospitalizations, and made unexpected trips to solve bureaucratic issues like retrieving a document from a safe-deposit box in order to open a bank account.

But he said he has also managed to get most of the logistics down to a routine.

He uses Skype to speak with his grandmother every day and tries to be there whenever she has a doctor's appointment. Aides handle many daily tasks and have access to a credit card for household expenses. They send him receipts so he can monitor spending. He has an apartment near his grandmother to make sure he's comfortable on his frequent visits.

Even for those who live near those they care for, travel for work can frequently make it a long-distance affair. Evelyn Castillo-Bach lives in Pembroke Pines, Fla., the same town as her 84-year-old mother, who has Alzheimer's disease. But she is on the road roughly half the year, sometimes for months at a time, both for work with her own Web company and accompanying her husband, a consultant for the United Nations.

Once, she was en route from Kosovo to Denmark when she received a call alerting her that her mother was having kidney failure and appeared as if she would die. She needed to communicate her mother's wishes from afar as her panicked sister tried to search their mother's home for her living will. Castillo-Bach didn't think she could make it in time to see her mother alive once more.

"I won't get to touch my mother again," she thought.

She was wrong. Her mother pulled through. But she says it illustrates what long-distance caregivers so frequently go through.

"This is one of the things that happens when you're thousands of miles away," Castillo-Bach said.

Lynn Feinberg, a caregiving expert at AARP, said the number of long-distance caregivers is likely to grow, particularly as a sagging economy has people taking whatever job they can get, wherever it is. Though caregiving is a major stress on anyone, distance can often magnify it, Feinberg said, and presents particular difficulty when it must be balanced with an inflexible job.

"It's a huge stress," she said. "It can have enormous implications not only for someone's quality of life, but also for someone's job."

It can also carry a huge financial burden. A November 2007 report by the National Alliance for Caregiving and Evercare, a division of United Health Group, found annual expenses incurred by long-distance caregivers averaged about $8,728, far more than caregivers who lived close to their loved one. Some also had to cut back on work hours, take on debt of their own and slash their personal spending.

Even with that in mind, though, many long-distance caregivers say they don't regret their decision. Rita Morrow, who works in accounting and lives in Louisville, Ky., about a six-hour drive from her 90-year-old mother in Memphis, Tenn., does all the juggling too.

She has to remind her mother to take her medicine, make sure rides are lined up for doctor's appointments, rush to her aid if there's a problem. She knows her mom wants to stay in her home, to keep going to the church she's gone to the past 60 years, to be near her friends.

"We do what we have to do for our parents," she said. "My mother did all kinds of things for me."

© 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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  • Regions: United States , West Palm Beach/Fort Pierce
  • Public Discussion (6)
RackNStack

If you're so damn worried about your elderly mother, how about you move them back home with you? Or, at the very least, find a place nearby that you can get her settled in and you can be nearby in case something happens. It drives me nuts when one of my patient's children calls me from a thousand miles away all aghast that their parent is not doing well.

  • 1 vote
Reply#1 - Thu Jan 26, 2012 8:45 PM EST
jameseg

Good point, RackNStack.

But parents often prefer staying in the same home they've lived in all their lives in a familiar neighborhood. Or are in a retirement community in Florida.

The job situation of the children may not make living there or moving there easy.

In some ways, life was simpler a century or two ago when most lived in rural areas, often on small farms, and multiple generations more often lived on the same property.

  • 1 vote
#1.1 - Thu Jan 26, 2012 11:47 PM EST
RackNStack

Yeah, I understand they may not want to move away from their neighborhood, but certain circumstances dictate it.

I never want to outlive my health. Seen too many people live their last few years of life in isolated misery.

  • 1 vote
#1.2 - Fri Jan 27, 2012 6:42 AM EST
jameseg

I never want to outlive my health.

Nor do I, RackNStack.

  • 1 vote
#1.3 - Fri Jan 27, 2012 12:47 PM EST
Reply
jameseg

It is a tough situation for many families.

  • 1 vote
Reply#2 - Thu Jan 26, 2012 11:43 PM EST
Thomas Koovalloor

Aging parent's care is an important subject . I appreciate Matt Sedensky for bringing this very important subject to light.most of the parents like to stay in their homes until they die unless they have no other choice. If we are fully Americanized parents will be end up in Nursing Homes or other such facilities when they become old. If parents are smart their children don't like them to stay with them they may go to retirement homes. Actually here we have to think about some humanitarian manner.When we were a child our parents took care of us, when they become old their situation is like babies and we have a moral obligation to take care of them in their old age. Other wise it is inhuman. In my opinion personal care is more important than the so-called " Long-Distance Care Giving". In long distance care giving our mind is always worried and we can't even sleep well. so try to take care of the parents in their old age.that is what many of the south Asian communities does.

  • 2 votes
Reply#3 - Fri Jan 27, 2012 1:03 AM EST
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