United States
WHO NEEDS HOME CARE?
- An estimated 36.8 million people - 12.4% of the population - are 65 and older.
- The U.S. population age 65 and older is expected to double in size within the next 25 years.
- By 2030, almost 1 in 5 Americans - some 72 million people - will be 65 or older.
- The 85+ population is projected to double from 4.7 million in 2003 to 9.6 million in 2030 - and double again to 20.9 million in 2050.
- In 1960, only 1.6% of older men and 1.5% of women age 65 and older were divorced. By 2003, 7% of older men and 8.6% of older women were divorced and had not remarried.
- About 80% of seniors have at least one chronic health condition and 50% have at least two.
Source(s):
1. Obtained directly from U.S. Census Bureau (2006)
2-4. U.S. Census Bureau Web Site: www.census.gov (2006)
5-6. U.S. Census Bureau: 65+ in the United States 2005 (2005)
WHO PROVIDES HOME CARE?
- Nearly 25% of all American adults currently provide daily companionship or assistance to a parent or relative.
- Approximately 60% of family caregivers are women.
- The typical family caregiver is a 46-year-old woman caring for her widowed mother who does not live with her. She is married and employed.
- An estimated 88% of married individuals report their spouse as their key caregiver.
Source(s)
1. Harris Interactive Study for Home Instead Senior Care (2003)
2-3. National Alliance for Caregiving and AARP: Caregiving in the U.S. (2004)
4. U.S. Census Bureau: 65+ in the United States (2005)
WHO NEEDS HELP?
- Approximately 37% of family caregivers spend more than 40 hours a week providing care, and 30% spend 20 to 39 hours per week doing so.
- Nearly seven in 10 (69%) family caregivers spend less time with family and friends since becoming caregivers.
- Nine in 10 family caregivers (91%) surveyed - all in fair/poor health - suffer from depression, and eight in 10 (81%) of those with depression report that caregiving had made their depression worse.
- Approximately 62% of family caregivers who work have had to make some adjustments to their work life, from reporting late to work to giving up work entirely.
- Nearly one in five caregivers (17%) says they provide more than 40 hours of care per week to a loved one.
- A wife's hospitalization increased her husband's chances of dying within a month by 35%. A husband's hospitalization boosted his wife's mortality risk by 44%.
- Extreme stress can take as much as 10 years off a family caregiver's life.
- Family caregivers report having a chronic condition at more than twice the rate of non-caregivers.
Source(s):
1-3. Evercare: Evercare Study of Caregivers in Decline: A Close-up Look at the Health Risks of Caring for a Loved One ( www.evercarehealthplans.com, 2006)
4-5, 8. National Alliance for Caregiving and AARP: Caregiving in the U.S. (2004)
6. New England Journal of Medicine (2006)
7. Peter S. Arno: Economic Value of Informal Caregiving (2006)
Canada
WHO NEEDS HOME CARE?
- An estimated 4.3 million people - more than 13% of the population - are age 65 and older.
- Approximately two million Canadians will be age 85 and older by 2051, almost five times the current figure.
- The number of seniors is expected to double by 2026, with seniors accounting for 21% of the population.
- By 2031, the number of Canadians age 65 and older could range from 8.9 million-9.4 million.
- It is projected that by 2030, there will be 40 retirees for every 100 working-age persons - up from 21 in 2003.*
Source(s): Statistics Canada unless otherwise indicated.
* Summit on Mature Market Workforce, 2006
WHO PROVIDES HOME CARE?
- More than 1.7 million adults age 45 to 64 provide informal care to almost 2.3 million seniors with long-term disabilities or physical limitations.*
- Approximately 18% of women and 19% of men age 45 and older say they provide care to one or more seniors with a long-term health problem.
- Approximately 39% of senior women and 45% of older men receive all of their care from informal sources.
Source(s): Statistics Canada unless otherwise indicated.
* "Balancing career and care," Perspectives on Labour and Income, 2006
WHO NEEDS HELP?
- One in 10 men aged 45-64 reports that their sleep patterns have been disrupted because of their caregiving activities; while nearly two in 10 women experience these problems.1
- The majority of female caregivers aged 45-64 are working (63%), most in a full-time capacity (72%).1
- About 44% of caregivers incur extra financial costs associated with caregiving responsibilities, such as decreased salary due to absences; lost promotion opportunities; and reduced retirement benefits.2
- Approximately 20% of women and 13% of men report that reducing hours of work is common as a result of caregiving.1
- Some 21% of women caregivers report that the need to provide care to a family member would be a likely reason for retirement, compared with 13% of women who were not providing care.3
- More than one in 10 seniors receiving care reside with their children, with this proportion being highest for seniors age 85 and older.1
Source(s):
1. Statistics Canada
2. Economic Security for Caregivers: A Policy Development Process to Better Support Unpaid Caregivers, a report from the Unpaid Caregiving Forum, convened by the Canadian Association for Community Living (CACL) in partnership with The Canadian Caregiver Coalition (CCC-CCAN), 2003
3. "Balancing career and care," Perspectives on Labour and Income, 2006