Elder Care at Home, Inc. & the Caregivers

Care Management

Q:  What are the personalized services of Elder Care At Home, Inc., and The Caregivers?
A:  The personalized services are as follows:

  • Functional assessment 
  • Information and referral
  • Home maintenance
  • Changing residences
  • Home care coordination
  • Counseling and support
  • Household finances
  • Health promotion
  • Risk Appraisal
  • Crisis Intervention
  • Management of personal caregivers
  • Placement of personal caregivers through licensed home care agency

Q:  What is a Geriatric Care Manager?
A:  A Professional Geriatric Care Manager specializes in assisting older people and their families with long term care arrangements.  GCM's have advanced degrees in gerontology, nursing, social work, and counseling.  They are experienced in assessing, planning, coordinating, monitoring, and delivering services to the elderly and their families.  Care management embraces a comprehensive range of services and the role of the care manager is multifaceted.

Professional Geriatric Care Managers:

  • Supplement the care of the family
  • Act as surrogate family for those clients without family
  • Represent families where distance or time separate clients from family
  • Assist clients to achieve improved quality of life and insure continuity of care with maximum dignity, privacy, and independence while providing caregivers with professional guidance.

The Geriatric Care Manager serves the older population that may:

  • Need multiple services or already have services that need monitoring
  • Contemplate a change of residence or placement in a care facility
  • Need adequate and dependable informal support system
  • Be overwhelmed by complex family dynamics or family in absentia
  • Live alone
  • Be homebound due to physical or mental limitations
  • Exhibit poor judgment
  • Be unable to access care
  • Require personal advocacy, counseling, and support

Professional competence requires knowledge, experience and skill on the part of the practitioner.  The expertise or technology that a care manager employs is a unique combination of both clinical and management capabilities, ultimately needed for the coordination, monitoring, and evaluating the planned care.  The assessment process requires clinical skills and judgment.  Advocacy and problem-solving skills help the process of care management.  Knowledge of community resources and means of accessing them are essential to initiating services.

The Geriatric Care Manager provides personalization of services, autonomy, greater flexibility, and long term relationships with clients and families. 

Information and referrals can be provided by calling or writing:

The National Association of Professional Geriatric Care Managers
1604 North Country Club Rd.
Tuscon, AZ 85716

Phone: 520-881-8008
Fax: 520-325-7925

This organization promotes the highest standards of practice.  Membership is awarded to those who are experienced in the delivery of services.  Those who will use the services of care management should require that the care manager be educated and licensed and preferably have membership in professional organizations.

Q:   Why do I need a Geriatric Care Manager?
A:   The American Health Care System can offer more than any other in the world if you know how to make it work for you.  Unfortunately, most people are unaware of what benefits they should be receiving, or how to interact with the system to obtain the best services for their situation.  Especially in light of the changes HMOs have brought to our system, the average American often settles for services way below standard.  Geriatric Care Managers know this system inside and out, and can advocate for you to receive the highest levels of care and the coverage that your insurance promises.  We can work with "case managers" with insurance companies,discharge planners in hospitals and rehabilitation facilities and with home care agencies to ensure that you receive the care you need and deserve.  GCMs ensure that the needs of the client are foremost, rather than the needs of the facility or provider.

Q:   How do Care Managers work with my family member's doctor and other professionals?
A:  
As the coordinators of care, private care managers work closely with every professional and para-professional involved with your elders health and well being.  We interface with the home health nurse and aides who are involved, making sure that the plan of care is followed, and that the personal care is properly performed.  We work closely with attorneys, financial planners and clergy, to see that all of the person's needs are being met. 

Q:  How are care managers an emerging service industry of the future?
A:   Case Management grew like topsy from the 50's on, when the spiraling cost of health care for the elderly and the mushrooming number of elders converged.  The Federal Government sought to find home based alternatives at that point and a conglomerate of senior services arose from the community, state, and federal level.  The problem of so called "continuum of care" was a fragmented mess with no central point of entry.  For the elder and her family it was similar to playing Monopoly with three different sets of rules and no idea where "GO" was.  Public geriatric case management programs arose to help the hapless families and confused elders navigate through the convoluted maze of services.  Private geriatric case management arrived when case managers took note that middle and upper class elders and their families needed and wanted the same guidance through the mystifying non-system and were happy to pay for the services.


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