 
Easing the Burden of Caregiving: The Impact of Consumer Direction on Primary Informal Caregivers in Arkansas
Article Publication Date
              Summary
              This paper assesses the effect of consumer-directed care on the emotional, physical, and financial well-being of the primary informal caregivers of the Medicaid beneficiaries who voluntarily joined Arkansas's Cash and Counseling demonstration. The implications of the demonstration find that permitting interested Medicaid beneficiaries to direct their own in-home supportive services reduces burden on informal caregivers, which may help reduce beneficiaries' nursing home use.
          Types/Tools
          
      Populations
          
      Sources
          
      The Gerontologist
      
  Programs/Initiatives
          
      States
          
      Keywords
          
       in-home supportive services
      
Contact
Randall
      
            Brown
      
            Mathematica Policy Research, Inc.
      
            P.O. Box 2393
      
            Princeton, NJ 08543
      
            NULL
      
            rbrown@mathematica-mpr.com
      
  
