Portrait of American Caregivers
According to a new report, Caregiving in the U.S. 2009, nearly one-third of the American adult population serves as a family caregiver. The study is based on interviews with 1,480 caregivers chosen at random and offers a national profile of people caring for adults, the elderly and children with special needs.
Notable findings include:
- One in seven caregivers provides care, over and above regular parenting, to a child with special needs.
- Caregiving lasts an average of 4.6 years.
- Caregivers provide an average of 20 hours of care per week.
- The main reasons people need care are old age (12 percent), Alzheimer's disease (10 percent), mental/emotional illness (7 percent), cancer (7 percent), heart disease (5 percent) and stroke (5 percent).
- IIlnesses/problems for which children need care are led by ADD/ADHD, autism, mental/emotional illness and developmental delay/mental retardation.
- Caregivers of children provide the most time-intensive care.
NAMI also has reported on the lived experiences of caregivers for loved ones living with mental illness in two survey reports, Depression: Gaps and Guideposts and Schizophrenia: Public Attitudes, Personal Needs.
NAMI Education Programs for Caregivers include Family-to-Family and NAMI Basics.