Study finds home health care workers struggle with their own health

By ANI | Published: December 11, 2021 04:44 PM2021-12-11T16:44:59+5:302021-12-11T16:55:02+5:30

According to new research by Weill Cornell Medicine, home health care workers suffer from poorer physical and mental health when compared with similar low-wage frontline workers.

Study finds home health care workers struggle with their own health | Study finds home health care workers struggle with their own health

Study finds home health care workers struggle with their own health

According to new research by Weill Cornell Medicine, home health care workers suffer from poorer physical and mental health when compared with similar low-wage frontline workers.

The research has been published in the 'American Journal of Public Health'.

The study indicated that more than a quarter of home health care workers rated their general health as fair or poor, while 1 in 5 reported poor mental health and 14 per cent had poor physical health. Factors linked to all three aspects of poorer health included low household income, cost barriers to medical care and history of depression.

The self-reported data was collected from nearly 3,000 home health care workers across 38 states and compared with those from health care aides and health care support workers not working in patients' homes. Compared with both other groups - which carried similar job responsibilities - home health care workers had a much higher prevalence of conditions such as arthritis, high cholesterol and high blood pressure, and depression.

"We've seen, especially during the COVID pandemic, that this workforce provides essential, day-to-day care to older adults to keep them healthy at home," said lead author Dr Madeline Sterling, assistant professor of medicine at Weill Cornell Medicine.

"But not a lot of research has investigated their own health. This data provided an opportunity to do that at a national level," Sterling added.

With more than 2 million in their ranks - a number expected to increase 38 per cent in the next three years alone - home health care workers are one of the fastest-growing workforces in the industry. The group is comprised mostly of women and minorities and typically employed by home care agencies, providing hands-on personal and medically oriented care to older adults and those with disabilities and chronic conditions.

Dr Sterling and her collaborators analyzed 2014 to 2018 data from the Centres for Disease Control and Prevention's Behavioural Risk Factor Surveillance System (BRFSS), a telephone survey zeroing in on the prevalence of medical conditions, health behaviours and preventative health practices such as undergoing routine doctor visits, dental care or receiving flu vaccinations.

The findings are "a call to action" to create interventions and occupational health initiatives specifically focused on home health care workers, Dr Sterling said. In addition to promoting higher wages and ensuring adequate health insurance among this workforce, programs that can screen workers for health risks and intervene on them may be warranted.

"Hopefully this study will spur public health experts and policymakers to put such programs in place. Right now, improving the health of these workers is not part of the conversation, and it should be," she said.

( With inputs from ANI )

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