Invisible Caregivers Invisible Caregivers

Invisible Caregivers

Older Adults Raising Children in the Wake of HIV/AIDS

    • ¥4,000
    • ¥4,000

発行者による作品情報

An understudied aspect of the HIV/AIDS epidemic is the creation of hundreds of thousands of grandparent-headed households that have become home to children bereft of one or both of their parents. Such "skip-generation parenting" presents a host of challenges to the families involved and the social programs designed to assist them. Despite this unprecedented caregiving responsibility, older surrogate parents remain relatively invisible, hidden in the shadows of HIV care and the demands of raising a child. The primary goal of Invisible Caregivers is to generate, support, and guide program and policy initiatives designed to meet the needs of elder surrogates and their families.

Most social service programs are not able to identify the needs of older surrogates, often because these surrogate parents in HIV-infected families are reluctant to make their needs known for fear of social stigma or possible reductions of benefits. Multiple systemic barriers to case management and other services also frustrate attempts to bring available resources to elder caregivers. These barriers include professional ignorance or denial that HIV affects surrogates, eligibility restrictions through CARE, limited funding and age restriction on OAA, and a fragmented health and human service system. Because the issues facing elder caregivers are many and varied, this collection covers a host of issues: community health, aging, HIV services, child welfare, education, public policy, and mental health.

ジャンル
ノンフィクション
発売日
2002年
2月28日
言語
EN
英語
ページ数
288
ページ
発行者
Columbia University Press
販売元
Lightning Source, LLC
サイズ
2.1
MB
Children and HIV/AIDS Children and HIV/AIDS
2017年
Custodial Grandparenting Custodial Grandparenting
2005年
Caregiving Contexts Caregiving Contexts
2007年
Continuing to Care Continuing to Care
2013年
Care Work Care Work
2002年
The Sandwich Generation The Sandwich Generation
2014年