Healthy Aging Requires a Healthy Home Care Workforce: the Occupational Safety and Health of Home Care Aides.
Margaret M QuinnP K MarkkanenC J GalliganS R SamaJ E LindbergM F EdwardsPublished in: Current environmental health reports (2021)
HC is one of the fastest growing US industries. Aides comprise its largest workforce and are increasingly needed to care for the rapidly aging population. There is an aide shortage due in part to instabilities in HC work organization and to serious job-specific hazards, resulting in aides losing work time. Recent social, economic, and technological factors are rapidly changing the nature of HC work, creating OSH hazards similar to those found in nursing homes. At the same time, aides are experiencing social and economic inequities that increase their vulnerability to OSH hazards. These hazards are also a burden on employers who are challenged to recruit, retain, and train aides. OSH injuries and illness interrupt the continuity of care delivery to clients. Many OSH hazards also put HC clients and families at risk. A new framework and methodologies are needed to assess aide and client safety together in order to guide future HC research, policies, and practices. Government, industry, and labor commitment is needed to fund and coordinate a comprehensive, multidisciplinary research program.
Keyphrases
- healthcare
- public health
- quality improvement
- mental health
- palliative care
- primary care
- pain management
- risk assessment
- hiv testing
- current status
- mass spectrometry
- high resolution
- affordable care act
- life cycle
- men who have sex with men
- human immunodeficiency virus
- chronic pain
- depressive symptoms
- hiv infected
- human health