North Taranaki Midweek

Research to give caregivers a voice

- HELEN HARVEY

There are more than 1 million people in New Zealand caring for family members who are unwell, saving the country an estimated $16.8 billion per annum.

But, the voices of unpaid caregivers aren’t heard, Laura Durville, a nursing lecturer at Western Institute of Technology Taranaki (Witt), said.

‘‘Caregivers do a really valuable and important job and their wellbeing is just as important as the people they are caring for.’’

Research has been done recently and published in a report, The State of Caring in Aotearoa, which was released last month.

The report focused on individual­s who provided care for family members and said: ‘‘Carers provide significan­t economic value to New Zealand – an estimated $16.8 billion per annum or 5.1% of gross domestic product – as well as priceless social and family value.’’

But Durville said there was a ‘‘big gap in the research’’.

‘‘I could find no research on people who were paid caregivers and also looked after a family member.’’

So she is making double caregivers – those who are employed as a paid caregiver and who are also an unpaid caregiver for a family member – the focus of research for her master’s degree.

‘‘I’m treating it as a pilot study so if it goes well I might be able to get a research grant to make a bigger go of it down the track.’’

And she is hoping her research will give caregivers a voice, she said.

‘‘I was thinking whose voices aren’t we hearing, and I got really interested in caregivers and their health. I feel they work really hard, and their jobs are often really challengin­g. One caregiver I talked to said it was the first time they’d felt listened to in a long time.’’

As a society we don’t value carers and caregivers nearly enough, she said.

‘‘They do such important work. Take care of our grandparen­ts parents. And with the ageing population it’s only going to increase, so we have to take care of our carers.’’

 ?? ANDY MACDONALD/STUFF ?? Nursing lecturer Laura Durville hopes research for her master’s degree will give caregivers a voice.
ANDY MACDONALD/STUFF Nursing lecturer Laura Durville hopes research for her master’s degree will give caregivers a voice.

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