"You can't breathe, you can't sleep," said White House senior adviser Valerie Jarrett, as she described the stress of worrying about an aging parent who needs assistance, and explained the comfort she gets from knowing her own parents now have a live-in caregiver.
Without that caregiver, Jarrett says that she would have had to leave the Obama administration and move back to Chicago.
Yet the three million professional, long-term home caregivers today are faced with a rapidly aging Baby Boomer population and a lack of adequate support, compensation or respect. Yesterday in Washington, the National Domestic Workers Alliance held what they called a Care Congress, an event where they introduced a campaign to "transform long-term care." The campaign is designed to push legislative changes to Medicare and Medicaid—creating jobs by increasing the amount of money eligible people can spend on at-home care and allowing a rapidly aging population to avoid institutionalization.
Labor Secretary Hilda Solis praised the work of home care workers—a group comprised primarily of immigrant women: "In Spanish, we call these women 'luchadoras', because they are fighting. They are strong women who fight and let nothing stand in their way."
Solis spoke directly to the audience full of caregivers, saying, "You are their friend, you are someone who listens, you give so much of yourself—physically as well as emotionally. You are professionals, and you should be treated as such."
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