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EVALUATION OF A CAREGIVER FINANCIAL PREPAREDNESS PROGRAM: SIGNIFICANT SHORT- AND LONG-TERM IMPACTS

Over 50 million informal caregivers provide care to an older adult age 50 or older. Negative financial impacts include significant out-of-pocket expenses, decreased income and future earnings. The program, Managing Money: A Caregiver’s Guide to Finances, was developed to address the lack of evidence...

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Autores principales: Judge, Katherine, Grant, Claire, Moreno, Monica, Lanigan, Kerry, Stratton, Lauren, Fazio, Sam
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9765897/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/geroni/igac059.1148
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author Judge, Katherine
Grant, Claire
Moreno, Monica
Lanigan, Kerry
Stratton, Lauren
Fazio, Sam
author_facet Judge, Katherine
Grant, Claire
Moreno, Monica
Lanigan, Kerry
Stratton, Lauren
Fazio, Sam
author_sort Judge, Katherine
collection PubMed
description Over 50 million informal caregivers provide care to an older adult age 50 or older. Negative financial impacts include significant out-of-pocket expenses, decreased income and future earnings. The program, Managing Money: A Caregiver’s Guide to Finances, was developed to address the lack of evidence-based programs and evaluated using a randomized control trial across 5 time points: Time 1 (baseline); Time 2 (after condition completion); Time 3 (30 days after Time 2); Time 4 (60 days after Time 2); and Time 5 (90 days after Time 2). The mean age of participants was 55.45 (SD=14.85); 80% female; 72% White and 69% married. Forty-six percent provided care to their parent/in-law, 36% to a spouse/partner, and 40% were employed full-time. Participants were randomly assigned to the program (N=76) or waitlist condition (N=98). No significant differences on demographic or care context variables were found between conditions. A 2 x 5 repeated measures analyses examined significant change across time based on condition. For significant outcomes, post-hoc analyses examined whether change was short-term (T2,T3); long-term (T4,T5); or both. Results found: 1) significant short- and long-term improvements for Unmet Needs (F(1,4)=8.34,p=.01); Self-efficacy (F(1,4)=4.27,p=.01); and Behavioral Intentions (F(1,4)=3.63,p=.01) and 2) significant long-term improvements for Unmet Needs Distress (F(1,4)=5.82,p=.01) and Behavioral Actions (F(1,4)=4.55,p=.01). Results indicated the program was efficacious in positively impacting key financial preparedness measures. Discussion highlights key study elements including program accessibility and scalability; generalizability of findings and limitations; and contextualizing results within the larger literature.
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spelling pubmed-97658972022-12-20 EVALUATION OF A CAREGIVER FINANCIAL PREPAREDNESS PROGRAM: SIGNIFICANT SHORT- AND LONG-TERM IMPACTS Judge, Katherine Grant, Claire Moreno, Monica Lanigan, Kerry Stratton, Lauren Fazio, Sam Innov Aging Abstracts Over 50 million informal caregivers provide care to an older adult age 50 or older. Negative financial impacts include significant out-of-pocket expenses, decreased income and future earnings. The program, Managing Money: A Caregiver’s Guide to Finances, was developed to address the lack of evidence-based programs and evaluated using a randomized control trial across 5 time points: Time 1 (baseline); Time 2 (after condition completion); Time 3 (30 days after Time 2); Time 4 (60 days after Time 2); and Time 5 (90 days after Time 2). The mean age of participants was 55.45 (SD=14.85); 80% female; 72% White and 69% married. Forty-six percent provided care to their parent/in-law, 36% to a spouse/partner, and 40% were employed full-time. Participants were randomly assigned to the program (N=76) or waitlist condition (N=98). No significant differences on demographic or care context variables were found between conditions. A 2 x 5 repeated measures analyses examined significant change across time based on condition. For significant outcomes, post-hoc analyses examined whether change was short-term (T2,T3); long-term (T4,T5); or both. Results found: 1) significant short- and long-term improvements for Unmet Needs (F(1,4)=8.34,p=.01); Self-efficacy (F(1,4)=4.27,p=.01); and Behavioral Intentions (F(1,4)=3.63,p=.01) and 2) significant long-term improvements for Unmet Needs Distress (F(1,4)=5.82,p=.01) and Behavioral Actions (F(1,4)=4.55,p=.01). Results indicated the program was efficacious in positively impacting key financial preparedness measures. Discussion highlights key study elements including program accessibility and scalability; generalizability of findings and limitations; and contextualizing results within the larger literature. Oxford University Press 2022-12-20 /pmc/articles/PMC9765897/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/geroni/igac059.1148 Text en © The Author(s) 2022. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of The Gerontological Society of America. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Abstracts
Judge, Katherine
Grant, Claire
Moreno, Monica
Lanigan, Kerry
Stratton, Lauren
Fazio, Sam
EVALUATION OF A CAREGIVER FINANCIAL PREPAREDNESS PROGRAM: SIGNIFICANT SHORT- AND LONG-TERM IMPACTS
title EVALUATION OF A CAREGIVER FINANCIAL PREPAREDNESS PROGRAM: SIGNIFICANT SHORT- AND LONG-TERM IMPACTS
title_full EVALUATION OF A CAREGIVER FINANCIAL PREPAREDNESS PROGRAM: SIGNIFICANT SHORT- AND LONG-TERM IMPACTS
title_fullStr EVALUATION OF A CAREGIVER FINANCIAL PREPAREDNESS PROGRAM: SIGNIFICANT SHORT- AND LONG-TERM IMPACTS
title_full_unstemmed EVALUATION OF A CAREGIVER FINANCIAL PREPAREDNESS PROGRAM: SIGNIFICANT SHORT- AND LONG-TERM IMPACTS
title_short EVALUATION OF A CAREGIVER FINANCIAL PREPAREDNESS PROGRAM: SIGNIFICANT SHORT- AND LONG-TERM IMPACTS
title_sort evaluation of a caregiver financial preparedness program: significant short- and long-term impacts
topic Abstracts
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9765897/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/geroni/igac059.1148
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