UC HEALTH LINE: Growing Number of Older Adults Increases Need for Caregivers
If youre not already providing care or support for a family member or a friend, chances are you will some time during your life, says Charles Puchta, director of the University of Cincinnati College of Nursing Center for Aging with Dignity.
According to the National Family Caregivers Association, more than 50 million people provide care for a chronically ill, disabled or aged family member or friend during any given year.
Most people lack the information, skills and confidence they need to be a caregiver, says Puchta. The best time to prepare and become familiar with a caregivers roles and responsibilities is before theres a need to provide support.
Puchta says the types of assistance people often need includes:
- Emotionallistening and responding to concerns, providing encouragement and moral support, maintaining contact and simply being there when needed.
- Financialorganizing bills, writing checks, balancing the checkbook and providing money to help cover expenses.
- Physicalassisting with daily living including personal care, household chores, meals, driving, medication, etc.
- Spiritualhelping people find meaning and purpose in life, maintaining hope, coping and finding peace through prayer or meditation based on their cultural and religious preferences.
A caregiver has many responsibilities and roles and its important for them to recognize their own limitations and to ask for help, he says.
The Center for Aging with Dignity focuses on helping people understand their situation, find the information they need to take the appropriate action and make informed decisions. The center is designed to complement existing services and organizations.
The center offers a series of publications on topics related to caregiving, including helpful resources on paying for care and living arrangements and providing care from out of town.
In addition, information is available that addresses whats normal and whats not in aging, when its time for an older adult to stop driving and how you can approach them, and how caregivers and older adults can address the concerns of dying, among other topics.
For more information on the center, call (513) 558-2428 or visit www.careadvocate.org.
Tags
Related Stories
Make Hoxworth Blood Center’s special holiday events part of your family celebrations this December
December 12, 2025
This December, Hoxworth Blood Center, University of Cincinnati, is inviting families across Greater Cincinnati to add something truly meaningful to their holiday traditions: giving the gift of life. With festive community events, beloved local partners and special thank-you gifts for donors, Hoxworth is making it easier, and more heartwarming than ever, to roll up your sleeves and help save lives close to home.
Ohio nurses weigh in on proposed federal loan rule
December 12, 2025
Spectrum News journalist Javari Burnett spoke with UC Dean Alicia Ribar and UC nursing students Megan Romero and Nevaeh Haskins about proposed new federal student loan rules. Romero and Haskins, both seniors, were filmed in the College of Nursing’s Simulation Lab.
New combination treatment improves multiple myeloma outcomes
December 11, 2025
The University of Cincinnati Cancer Center's Ed Faber, DO, provided commentary to Medscape on the COBRA study that found the combination of carfilzomib combined with lenalidomide and dexamethasone (KRd) shows significantly greater efficacy than the previous standard of care.