Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Wanted: Caregivers seeking a rewarding but low-paying job

Much-needed helpers may earn $10-$12/hr.

- By Kate Giammarise

On Wednesday, Jovan Harris arrived at work at 8 a.m. — at a home on a quiet residentia­l street in Mt. Lebanon where he helps care for three men with intellectu­al disabiliti­es.

His colleague who worked the overnight shift made sure they all had their correct medication­s, were dressed and ate breakfast.

After getting them on the bus to their day programs or jobs, Mr. Harris started the paperwork portion of his day: making sure their finances are in order, bills are paid, Medicaid billing documents are properly in order and medical appointmen­ts are scheduled. At 1:30, he picked up one man from his job at Goodwill. When the others got home, they packed their lunches for the next day — all three have special diets — and helpedwith afternoon activities.

At 5:30 in the evening, Mr. Harris was cooking dinner — pork chops, peas and sweet potato fries. He was to be there until his colleague arrived at 10 p.m.

Caring for six adults with intellectu­al disabiliti­es in two different homes during the week is a tough job, but Mr. Harris — known to his family and those he cares for as “Jojo”— loves it.

“It’s a fulfilling job. You have people that depend on you,” said Mr. Harris, 31, of McKees Rocks, a senior direct support profession­al with the Emmaus Community of Pittsburgh who has been in the field for six years.

But advocates and family members of people with intellectu­al disabiliti­es say there aren’t nearly enough people doing the job Mr. Harris and his co-workers do — and because of economic and demographi­c factors, the issue has reached crisis proportion­s. Providers say it is difficult for them to recruit and keep these direct support profession­als — the front-line workers who care for people with intellectu­al disabiliti­es intheir homes and communitie­s.

Statewide nonprofit Pennsylvan­ia Advocacy and Resources for Autism and Intellectu­al Disability estimates that of 35,000 DSP positions, 4,200 are vacant and 9,500 DSPs leavethe workforce annually.

While rewarding, the job of a direct support profession­al often is relatively low-paying and extremely challengin­g — and is really more like five or six jobs than one, providers say.

“It’s much more complicate­d than just being a caregiver and just keeping somebody safe, and that’s hard enough with some of the people . . . who have really complex

needs, either behavioral­ly or medically,” said Stacey Dowden, director of intellectu­al & developmen­tal disabiliti­es services at Milestone Centers. “What is asked of the DSPs is significan­tly more than that.”

DSPs must assist the physical needs that their charges mightnot be able to handle for themselves, such as going to the bathroom. They also must attend to the medical needs of the people they care for, such asadminist­ering medication.

Many DSPs also have to handle household duties like menu planning, shopping for food and preparing healthy meals, sometimes for individual­s who have dietary restrictio­ns or might not be able to fully chew their food. They must carry money to pay for the groceries and make sure people’s funds are properly accounted for, as well as assisting with household chores like cleaning and laundry.

Sometimes a DSP might have to drive a lift van that can carry a wheelchair for trips like medical appointmen­ts, shopping, haircuts or going to church.

They must document all their activities and note any problems. All this, for about $10 to $12 an hour.

Low wages, high turnover

While many people stay in the job because they love caring for others, low wages mean many workers have second jobs or must use public benefits — such as food stamps or housing assistance — to make ends meet.

Most DSPs are not unionized, though a small percentage are, said Amy Hewitt, a Minnesota-based researcher who studies community services and supports for people with intellectu­al and developmen­tal disabiliti­es.

The average hourly wage is $10.92 — about $22,710 a year — according to the federal Bureau of Labor Statistics, which classifies DSPs in the broader category of personal care aides.

Such low wages lead to high turnover in the field — advocacy group Pennsylvan­ia Advocacy and Resources for Autism and Intellectu­al Disability estimates the DSP turnover rate is about 25 percent annually.

“If I could reduce my turnover, I could afford to pay more, but you get that chicken-and-egg thing — I can’t afford to pay more until I reduce the turnover, but I can’t reduce the turnover because I can’t afford to pay more,” said Ms. Dowden.

High staff turnover also means the quality of the relationsh­ip between DSPs and thosethey care for can suffer.

Carol Tabas of Squirrel Hill usually is searching for caregivers who can help care for her son Chet, 33, in their home.

“I spend my life searching for caregivers; that’s my job,” she said.

Her son is not able to get out of bed without assistance and needs aid with activities such as using the bathroom, brushing his teeth, bathing and getting dressed.

Hecan’t speak but can communicat­e some preference­s nonverball­y, such as which shirthe wants to wear or what he would like to eat for lunch. It takes time for caregivers to learnthis, his mother said.

“It can be devastatin­g if someone has to leave, if they aren't making enough money to survive,” Ms. Tabas said.

Medicaid funds

DSP wages ultimately come from Medicaid dollars — the joint federal-state program that pays for care for disabled and low-income individual­s. The rates paid to providers are set by the state and have not increased in 10 years, since the state's 20072008 budget, and thus wages for DSPs have flatlined, providers say.

“They're not paid enough. The reality of it is they’re just not paid enough,” said state Rep. Dan Miller, D-Mt. Lebanon, a co-chair of the House Autism and Intellectu­al Disabiliti­es Caucus.

The problem is not unique to Pennsylvan­ia. Essentiall­y, “it requires an appropriat­ion at the state level for any increase in wages,” said Ms. Hewitt, the Minnesota-based researcher who studies the issue.

Pennsylvan­ia’s 2017-2018 spending plan approved by legislator­s in June does include rate increases, which went into effect July 1, though the budget remains incomplete because a revenue package has been passed only by the Senate and not the House.

Rate increases of about $200 million total will be paid to providers and hopefully ultimately passed on to workers in the form of higher wages, said Nancy Thaler, deputy secretary for the Office of Developmen­tal Programs at the state’s Department of Human Services. Rates increased by 5 to 10 percent — though that won’t necessaril­y translate into wage increases of the same amount — she said.

“It's a significan­t amount of money,” she said.

Besides the financial problems that can make it hard for DSPs to remain in the field, there are demographi­c and other factors.

Most DSPs don't walk in the door with much training about how to care for people with disabiliti­es, said Karen Jacobsen, executive director of Emmaus Community of Pittsburgh.

At the same time, other caregiving jobs pay better.

“We are in competitio­n with hospitals and nursing homes,” said Nancy Murray, president of the Arc of Greater Pittsburgh at Achieva. “We’e in competitio­n for the same pool of people.” Additional­ly, the demographi­c group that tends to perform caregiving jobs, historical­ly women ages 18 to 50, is not growing as rapidly as the number of elderly Americans who will need aid, she said.

Ms. Jacobsen also sees a major obstacle in that society doesn't value caregiving as a profession, instead seeing it as thankless work they hope someone else is there to do, she said.

“I think our society undervalue­s caregiving in general,” she said.

 ?? Rebecca Droke/Post-Gazette photos ?? Jason Tessling, 34, front, and Matthew Mittelmeie­r, 49, right, team up against Jovan Harris, a senior direct support profession­al with Emmaus Community of Pittsburgh, as they play basketball after dinner Wednesday at a group home in Mt. Lebanon.
Rebecca Droke/Post-Gazette photos Jason Tessling, 34, front, and Matthew Mittelmeie­r, 49, right, team up against Jovan Harris, a senior direct support profession­al with Emmaus Community of Pittsburgh, as they play basketball after dinner Wednesday at a group home in Mt. Lebanon.
 ??  ?? Mr. Mittelmeie­r, center, prepares the weekly meal plan Wednesday with input from housemates Mr. Tessling, left, and David Petrucco, second from right, along with Mr. Harris.
Mr. Mittelmeie­r, center, prepares the weekly meal plan Wednesday with input from housemates Mr. Tessling, left, and David Petrucco, second from right, along with Mr. Harris.
 ??  ?? Jason Tessling, left, helps prepare dinner along with Mr. Harris on Wednesday. Cooking dinner and helping group home residents with other daily tasks is Mr. Harris’ job. Mr. Tessling likes to help with the cooking and clean up after meals.
Jason Tessling, left, helps prepare dinner along with Mr. Harris on Wednesday. Cooking dinner and helping group home residents with other daily tasks is Mr. Harris’ job. Mr. Tessling likes to help with the cooking and clean up after meals.
 ?? Rebecca Droke/Post-Gazette photos ?? Jovan Harris plays basketball with residents of the group home where he works in Mt. Lebanon. Direct support profession­als such as Mr. Harris have many roles to fill.
Rebecca Droke/Post-Gazette photos Jovan Harris plays basketball with residents of the group home where he works in Mt. Lebanon. Direct support profession­als such as Mr. Harris have many roles to fill.

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