Tag Archives: turnover

High Turnover of Home Caregivers Makes Life Precarious for Many

Mary Barket, a 66-year-old widow with a degenerative muscular disorder and no family around to help, has had seven different caregivers come through her home in the past six months.

On a recent Saturday morning, she was told by the home care agency that her caregiver wasn’t coming that day and that it couldn’t send a substitute, she says. Ms. Barket had one meal to last her until Monday, when the next caregiver was due.

“My hands don’t work. I can’t even open a box,” says Ms. Barket, who has ALS, or amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. “It’s a very tenuous situation.”

High turnover among in-home caregivers is straining the daily lives of America’s aging population, which relies on them to remain in their homes.

The median caregiver turnover rate—or the percentage of all caregivers who left or were terminated from jobs—was about 64.9% in 2021, according to a report by Home Care Pulse, a company that provides data and training to home care agencies. Though the number has improved from a peak of 81.6% in 2018, it represents a major supply gap, according to people in the home care industry.

Turnover among the 1,461 home care agencies participating in the 2022 HCP Benchmarking Report remained relatively stable during the pandemic, says Home Care Pulse president Todd Austin. Agencies increased wages and more offered benefits to recruit and retain workers, while also doing more to recognize workers as “care heroes” to improve job satisfaction, he says.

But the pandemic added to demand, as the high number of Covid deaths at long-term-care facilities contributed to the desire for people to remain in their homes.

Between 2008 and 2018, the number of home care workers more than doubled to 2.26 million from about 900,000, according to a 2022 report from the Home Care Association of America, an industry trade organization representing home care providers.

The Labor Department projects 25% employment growth in the next decade for home health and personal care aides, which includes those who work in group homes and day service programs, compared with an average expected growth rate of 5% for all occupations.

Even with rapid growth, home care agencies can’t meet demand. More than 85% of the home care agencies in the 2022 HCP Benchmarking Report turned down cases in 2021 due to the shortage, and 59.7% consistently turned down clients.

To help address the staffing problem, many home care agencies boosted incentives and bonuses and are offering training in areas like end-of-life care, meal planning and Alzheimer’s care, says Mr. Austin and others in the industry.

Ms. Espinosa helps Ms. Barket, who has ALS, change clothes.

Ms. Barket lives alone with no family in the area available to assist in her care. She relies on help from two home care agencies.

About 40% of agencies now offer signing bonuses, and 94% have increased pay, some by as much as $10 an hour based on experience, according to the 2022 report from the Home Care Association of America.

But wages remain relatively low. Median pay in 2021, the latest figure available, was $14.15 an hour, or $29,430 a year, for home health and personal care aides, according to the Labor Department.

The jobs are difficult in other ways, too—clients can be demanding, the work can be physically and emotionally taxing and the hours inconsistent.

Waiting list

In Lackawanna County, Pa., about 40 older adults are on a waiting list for in-home care, says

Jason Kavulich,

outgoing director of the county Area Agency on Aging, who was recently named Secretary of Aging for Pennsylvania. Six years ago, when he became director of the agency, there was no waiting list, he says.

“This is the postpandemic world,” says Mr. Kavulich. “People are not entering the help field. They have found other work.” To try to help meet demand, the county agency is working on a scholarship program at a local college for students to provide 15 to 18 hours of in-home care a week to older adults.

For families, high turnover adds a layer of uncertainty to the already stressful task of finding care for loved ones. Some families receive last-minute phone calls saying a worker isn’t coming, which leaves them scrambling to find a substitute so they themselves can go to work.

John Giurini, who shares a home with his 93-year-old mother and his sister in the Los Angeles area, says there had been times when he received a call the night before—or even the morning of—from the agency that provides full-time in-home care, saying the worker they expected for the next shift wasn’t available. Usually a substitute was sent but not always. 

“We would not know in the morning who was coming to the front door” other than a name, says Mr. Giurini, assistant director of public affairs at the J. Paul Getty Museum. 

He says rotating people in and out of the home is stressful for the family, but even more so for their mother, who has dementia and gets confused. One caregiver became combative with their mother about how much toothpaste she was using, and another young man ran personal errands instead of staying at the doctor’s office while their mother had a medical appointment, he says. He and his sister explored other options, including hiring a caregiver directly, rather than relying on an agency, but decided against it.

“Say you hire someone and are fortunate to find a good person. What happens when that person is sick?” he asks. An agency, at least, has other workers. Mr. Giurini says they have lucked out in the past six months with a caregiver from their agency who is attentive and professional.

They pay the agency $32 an hour and rates will increase to $35 an hour in February.

In-home care workers are generally employed by home care agencies, which are paid by individuals and families, or through private long-term-care insurance or Medicaid, Veterans Affairs or Medicare Advantage insurance, or by some nonprofit organizations.

Some home care companies have adopted technology to help provide consistent scheduling and care.

Jisella Dolan,

chief advocacy officer for Home Instead, which has 1,200 home-care franchises across the U.S., says the company uses a technology platform that coordinates scheduling and allows family members, using a downloaded app, to see who is coming each day, when, and if there are any changes.

Home Instead, which is a subsidiary of Honor Technology Inc., doesn’t guarantee it will find replacements if a scheduled worker isn’t available, but it strives to do so, she says. The company no longer has the waiting list for services that it did last year during the height of Omicron infections, she says.

Extra training

Home Instead also has training for those working with clients who have special conditions such as Parkinson’s and Alzheimer’s disease.

Routine and regularity are especially important for those with Alzheimer’s, says

Amy Goyer,

the family caregiving expert at AARP, who cared for and managed paid caregivers for her parents, including a father with Alzheimer’s, before they died.

“Every time you get a new paid caregiver, you have to train them,” she says. “ ‘This is what time my parents get out of bed. This is when they eat breakfast and lunch. These are the clothes my dad wears, the TV shows he watches and the music he listens to.’ ”

She advises families to have at least two caregivers, each with a different shift so one can fill in when the other can’t work, and to keep a checklist of daily routines with tasks and times listed for showers, meals, medications and getting in and out of bed, so those coming in on short notice know what to do. Families that can afford it can also hire a geriatric care manager to coordinate care and find backups, which is especially helpful if family members live out of town.

Ms. Espinosa, who was referred by the local ALS chapter, preps meals for Ms. Barket.

Frances Copeland says she had 10 caregivers in a 15-month-period between 2021 and 2022 for her 91-year-old mother, with the longest lasting eight months. “We had an occasion where two caregivers showed up and they stood outside arguing about whose day it was to be there,” she says.

Ms. Copeland, who is a certified nursing assistant and has been a caregiver for others, understands why some quit. “The pay isn’t great, and the clients can be demanding and critical,” she says. She recalls driving 45 minutes to one client’s house and being told to turn around and go back because she wasn’t needed that day.

Not all home healthcare agencies are comfortable working with people who have ALS or Alzheimer’s because of their advanced needs, says Jessie Meier, a social worker with the ALS Association Greater Philadelphia Chapter.

“The care is so personal and deeply intimate. You are helping a person shower, bathe and toilet,” she says, which makes familiarity even more important.

Ms. Barket, the widow, who lives in Bethlehem Township, Pa., says her family is small and distant. One brother lives in North Carolina and an aunt lives more than an hour away. Her daughter lives closer but has mental-health challenges and is unable to help with care.

Ms. Barket relies on caregivers from one agency, who come three hours a day, five days a week. Another caregiver, referred to her by the ALS Association, comes on a sixth day for three hours. The caregivers assemble meals in takeout containers, the lids laying across the top because she can’t get them off. She can’t carry a plate.

“My hands and wrists are too unstable at this point,” she says. If something falls to the floor, she tries to use a hangar to get it up to her. “I try to MacGyver everything,” she says. Unable to open drawers, she keeps clothes in a basket.

Each time a new caregiver arrives, she asks them if they know anything about ALS. If they don’t she tells them to Google it, so they understand her limitations. “I can’t fault caregivers, who are doing their best,” she says. “Ninety-five percent of them are wonderful.”

The unpredictability, though, is frightening, especially since her disease is progressive. On the recent Saturday when the caregiver couldn’t come, she says she had the “wherewithal” to call a friend who brought meals.

“Down the road, I won’t be able to speak,” she says. “Then what? It’s very scary at times.”

Ms. Barket says she has had seven different caregivers come through her home in the past six months.

Write to Clare Ansberry at clare.ansberry@wsj.com

Copyright ©2022 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8

Read original article here

Another bad roughing the passer call, this one took a turnover away from Chiefs D

Andy Reid is a gentle soul, especially in relation to other NFL head coaches. It takes a lot to get him as heated as he was Monday night.

He can join other coaches, players and fans around the NFL who aren’t happy with how roughing the passer is being called this week.

The Kansas City Chiefs were on the wrong end of a bad call on Monday night. Chiefs defensive lineman Chris Jones seemed to make a huge play late in the second quarter with the Chiefs trailing 17-7. Jones got to the Las Vegas Raiders’ Derek Carr, sacked him and got a fumble. He landed on Carr but it wasn’t egregious.

The flag came out. So did Reid’s anger as he yelled at the officials.

Officials ruled that Jones landed with his body weight on Carr. There wasn’t a lot of choice as Jones cradled the fumble after hitting Carr.

“At some point you have to be realistic,” ESPN play-by-play announcer Joe Buck said on the broadcast. “The defense player, what’s he supposed to do, disappear?”

“I just think it’s a bad call,” ESPN color analyst Troy Aikman, a Hall of Fame quarterback, added.

Chiefs fans booed and chanted at the officials the rest of the half.

ESPN brought on officiating analyst John Parry, who pointed out that Jones braced himself with his left arm, which officials are supposed to look for when judging if a defender falls on the quarterback with his full body weight. He seemed to disagree with the call too.

“I can see why the Kansas City fans are not thrilled with it,” Parry said.

It was another questionable roughing call, one day after the Atlanta Falcons got a universally criticized roughing call against Tom Brady. Officiating always gets criticized, and now fans have a good reason to tee off.

Kansas City Chiefs defensive tackle Chris Jones (95) was on the wrong end of a bad roughing the passer call. (Peter Joneleit via AP)

Read original article here

Miami and coach Mario Cristobal are retiring the turnover chain

Enjoy retirement, turnover chain. You were a beacon of college football light.

Miami coach Mario Cristobal confirmed Thursday at his ACC media days appearance that Miami would no longer be breaking out the iconic jewelry after forcing a turnover.

The turnover chain was introduced in 2017 and its various iterations have been a big part of the Miami program for the past five seasons. Former coach Manny Diaz was the team’s defensive coordinator when the chain made its debut. But the turnover chain era is now over, just like Diaz’s tenure as Miami head coach. And Cristobal really didn’t seem too inclined to talk a lot about the chain being put out to pasture on Thursday.

“I think probably the media has put more thought into this than I have,” Cristobal said Thursday when he was asked why Miami had retired the turnover chain. “We just really focus on getting better as a program and have focused on technique, fundamentals, regimentation, academics, strength and conditioning, sports science, community service, and that’s what the focus has been on.”

“It is not a shot or form of disrespect to anybody or anyone. Certainly history is history, and whether it’s positive, whether it’s inconsequential, whatever it may be, it’s still history and part of your program. We’re just moving in a direction that right now doesn’t involve it. That’s really the best way to address it.

“Let’s put it this way. We’ve been working so hard and paying attention to so many other things that, in my opinion, are much more critical to winning football games and having success that it really hasn’t been a subject or a topic. We won’t be using it. You guys OK with that? We good now? Everybody got the chain stuff? OK. All right. Thank you.”

We will not see a turnover chain on the Miami sidelines in 2022. (Photo by David Rosenblum/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

A Miami native, Cristobal came to the Hurricanes from Oregon after the team zeroed in on him as the replacement for Diaz. Cristobal played football at Miami and is very familiar with the outward displays of emotion that happen at Miami. He was part of the legendary Miami teams of the late 1980s and early 1990s that took the college football world by storm with their brash attitudes.

But Cristobal clearly doesn’t think Miami should be celebrating defensive success with the chain. At least not right now. Hopefully, it makes a comeback in the future. The turnover chain was fun. And Miami being successful and having an attitude makes college football fun, too.

Read original article here

Miami Hurricanes to retire ‘turnover chain,’ according to new football coach Mario Cristobal

The Miami Hurricanes are ditching the “turnover chain” for the 2022 season, first-year coach Mario Cristobal told the Action Network on Wednesday.

“It’s not part of our culture,” Cristobal said, according to a tweet from the publication.

Miami’s turnover chain is an oversized 36-inch, 2.5-kilogram, 10-karat gold chain worn by players on the sideline after forcing a turnover. It has been used by the school since the first game of the 2017 season.

The Hurricanes hired Cristobal as their new coach in December, after four seasons leading Oregon. A Miami native, Cristobal won two national championships at the school as a player and earned two degrees from his time here.

Cristobal is scheduled to meet with reporters on Thursday morning at ACC Media Days in Charlotte, N.C.



Read original article here

Chinese state newspaper blasts ‘worship of turnover’ after Alibaba’s Singles Day

People walk along a main shopping area during the Alibaba’s Singles’ Day shopping festival in Shanghai, China November 11, 2021. REUTERS/Aly Song

SHANGHAI, Nov 12 (Reuters) – The focus of China’s Singles’ Day shopping festival should shift from a “traffic and sales war” to one of science and technology, a state-backed newspaper said on Friday, describing the “worship of turnover” as incompatible with China’s new development path.

The article in the Securities Daily comes a day after the annual shopping blitz spearheaded by Alibaba Group (9988.HK), which recorded 540.3 billion yuan in orders over the 11-day event.

The newspaper said the event had achieved many years of record breaking sales, but had also given rise to practices such as spam text messaging of users, unfair competition and merchants faking discounts. The model had become one in which it was hard to achieve “breakthrough innovations”, the paper said.

By using low prices as a selling point, platforms and merchants were stimulating “low-level” consumption, which was in not in line with China’s goals to achieve high-quality development, it added.

“The ‘worship of turnover’ is not only unsustainable in terms of digital growth but is also inextricably linked to chaos,” the newspaper said.

It said that it hoped to see Singles’ Day become a festival for platforms and businesses to showcase innovative achievements, and eventually even higher pursuits.

“I hope that one day, China’s Internet giants will no longer focus on the business of mom-and-pop shops, but will be able to walk towards space in their own private rocket,” the article’s writer said, pointing to Amazon founder Jeff Bezos’ and Tesla founder Elon Musk’s rocket projects as examples.

Alibaba and JD.com did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Alibaba turned China’s informal Singles’ Day into a shopping event in 2009 and built it into the world’s biggest online sales fest, dwarfing Cyber Monday in the United States.

It toned down the marketing hype this year amid regulatory scrutiny, doing away with a rolling tally tracking transactions that had taken centre stage in previous years and said it was focused on sustainability.

Rival JD.com (9618.HK), which also holds its own Singles Day shopping event, similarly did not publish real-time sales data.

($1 = 6.3898 Chinese yuan renminbi)

Reporting by Brenda Goh. Editing by Gerry Doyle

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

Read original article here

Jeff Bezos’ Blue Origin battling employee turnover among executives, engineers

Nearly a dozen Blue Origin employees, including executives and engineers, have left Jeff Bezos’ company in recent months amid intense competition among private space firms, FOX Business confirmed on Friday.

The prominent departures included Jeff Ashby, a former NASA astronaut who served as Blue Origin’s chief of mission assurance, Bob Ess, who was senior director of the “New Glenn” orbital launch vehicle program and Steve Bennett, senior vice president of the New Shepard suborbital launch program. 

Several engineers involved in production and design of Blue Origin vessels, including engine propulsion, have also departed, with two taking jobs at rival companies such as Elon Musk’s SpaceX. In total, at least 11 executives, managers or engineers have left the company in recent months.

Some of the exits, including that of Ashby, occurred after Blue Origin completed its first manned spaceflight. In late July, Bezos and three other passengers completed a 10-minute suborbital flight in Blue Origin’s New Shepard rocket.

SPACEX BOSS ELON MUSK SAYS STARSHIP WILL LAND HUMANS ON MOON ‘PROBABLY SOONER’ THAN 2024

CNBC was first to report on recent employee turnover at the firm.

Blue Origin pushed back on the notion that it was experiencing an exodus of top talent, asserting the employee turnover was normal given the industry’s competitive nature and pressures related to the COVID-19 pandemic. The company said its senior leadership team is intact and touted hires made in the last several months, including former Honeywell executive Mike Eilola as its senior vice president of operations and Aerojet Rocketdyne alum Linda Cova as vice president for engines.

“Blue Origin grew by 850 people in 2020, and we have grown by another 650 so far in 2021,” a Blue Origin spokesperson said in a statement. “In fact, we’ve grown by nearly a factor of four over the past three years. We continue to fill out major leadership roles in manufacturing, quality, engine design, and vehicle design. It’s a team we’re building and we have great talent.”

CLICK HERE TO READ MORE ON FOX BUSINESS

Blue Origin paid out a $10,000 bonus to full-time employees on June 30. The company said the bonus was intended as a “thank you” celebrating Bezos’ successful launch, not as a retention bonus to entice employees to remain.

Blue Origin and SpaceX are locked in competition as NASA pursues a return to the Moon. 

Earlier this week, Blue Origin sued NASA after it awarded a $3 billion lunar lander contract to Musk’s firm as part of its effort to reach the Moon by 2024. The lawsuit prompted NASA to temporarily table its work with SpaceX.

Read original article here