Official Site of the U.S. Air Force   Right Corner Banner
Join the Air Force

News > VA's caregiver support program expanding
VA's caregiver support program expanding

Posted 3/1/2011 Email story   Print story

    

3/1/2011 - WASHINGTON  -- Department of Veterans Affairs officials are expanding support nationally to caregivers of veterans with Alzheimer's disease.

A pilot program of the Resources for Enhancing Alzheimer's Caregiver Health in VA program, or REACH VA, showed great success in reducing stress on caregivers while improving care outcomes for the veterans.

"The REACH VA model exemplifies the many different kinds of support VA offers to the caregivers of veterans," said Secretary of Veterans Affairs Eric K. Shinseki. "This program has been proven to provide the right resources, training and a renewed focus on personal health that can make a world of difference to those caregivers and their veterans."

"Caregivers step up every day to serve veterans they love who sacrificed to defend our nation," Secretary Shinseki said. "To them, caregiving is a labor of love and devotion, but that alone does not ease the burden and personal stress placed on those who provide daily care for the disabled."

REACH VA involved 127 caregivers connected to 24 VA medical centers.

The median age for the caregiver was 72 and the majority of the participants were spouses.

Typical issues caregivers face when caring for veterans with Alzheimer's disease and dementia include memory problems, behavior problems and the need to provide basic attendance such as grooming assistance.

Caregivers typically reported feeling overwhelmed, frustrated, cut off from family and friends, lonely, prone to bouts of crying and having worse physical health than the year before.

For six months, the REACH VA caregivers were provided 12 individual in-home and telephone counseling sessions, five telephone support group sessions, a caregiver quick guide with 48 behavioral and stress topics, education on safety and patient behavior management and training for their individual health and well being.

Caregivers saw their burden reduced; drops in depressive symptoms and their related daily impacts; fewer frustrations, including those that have clinical potential for abuse; and decreases in dementia-related behaviors from the veterans they cared for. Caregivers also reported they were able to spend fewer hours per day devoted to caregiving duties.

"Dementia caregiving is such an all-encompassing task," said Dr. Linda Nichols from the VA medical center in Memphis, Tenn., and co-author of a recent study on the program.

"The intervention provided time for themselves, which caregivers never have enough of," she said. "REACH VA improved our caregivers' knowledge to manage care, made them feel more confident and competent as they formed bonds with the VA staff supporting them, and decreased the inevitable feelings of isolation and loneliness that come from a selfless, but very sacrificial duty of care."

VA officials will roll out REACH VA on a national basis through home-based primary care programs across the country. In addition, the program will be modified to assist caregivers of veterans with other diagnoses like spinal cord injury and traumatic brain injury.

"Providing support to caregivers who sacrifice so much to allow veterans to remain at home surrounded by loved ones is the right thing for VA to do," said Dr. Robert Petzel, VA's undersecretary for health.

An article on the REACH VA program is being published in the Feb. 28 issue of the Archives of Internal Medicine. Dr. Nichols and Dr. Jennifer Martindale-Adams, also from VA's Memphis facility, are the lead authors and based the VA pilot on the funded REACH II study by the National Institute on Aging and the National Institute for Nursing Research. REACH VA is the first national clinical implementation of a proven behavioral intervention for stressed and burdened dementia caregivers.

Local caregiver support coordinators are available to assist veterans of all eras and their caregivers in understanding and applying for VA's many caregiver benefits. VA also features a website, www.caregiver.va.gov, with general information on REACH VA and other caregiver support programs available through VA and the community.



tabComments
3/4/2011 1:22:13 AM ET
I would like to know more specifics about this study. I am a caregiver for a veteran and have been hoping for such a support group.
Adeline Fendley, Columbus MS
 
Add a comment

 Inside AF.mil

ima cornerSearch

tabSubscribe AF.MIL
tabMore HeadlinesRSS feed 
New training facility opens in Wyoming

Solar power lights up Southwest Asia

Separate paths bring brothers together for Christmas  1

All I want for Christmas ... Daddy!

Osan community brightens holidays for Korean orphans  |  VIDEO

Deployed Airman receives Christmas phone call from President Obama

Air Force Week in Photos

Premier AF concert band 'wows' fellow musicians at Midwest Clinic  11

Pararescue, security forces Airmen train as one  10

Through Airmen's Eyes: High school reunion ... above Afghanistan

Space Fence program moves forward  1

Kunsan AB, Hurlburt Field Airmen unite to spread holiday cheer

Operation Christmas Drop  1

Air Force Week in Photos

tabCommentaryRSS feed 
Legacy of valor  1

There IS an I in team  3


Site Map      Contact Us     Questions     Security and Privacy notice     E-publishing