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The hidden role informal caregivers play in health care

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    Let's put the care back into health care.
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    I've been working in the healthcare sector
    for the last 15 years,
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    and one of the things
    that drew me to this sector
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    was my interest in the care component
    of our healthcare systems,
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    more specifically,
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    to the invaluable role played by carers.
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    Now, how many of you in this room
    consider yourself a carer?
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    By this, I mean how many of you
    have cared for someone
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    suffering from an illness,
    injury or disability?
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    Can you raise your hand
    if this is the case?
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    About half of the room.
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    I want to thank all of you
    who raised your hands
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    for the time that you've spent as a carer.
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    What you do is extremely precious.
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    I am a former cared-for patient myself.
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    When I was a teenager,
    I suffered from Lyme disease
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    and underwent 18 months
    of antibiotic treatment.
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    I was repeatedly misdiagnosed:
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    bacterial meningitis,
    fibromyalgia, you name it.
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    They couldn't figure it out.
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    And if I'm standing here
    in front of you today,
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    it's because I owe my life
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    to the stubbornness
    and commitment of one carer.
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    He did everything he could for me --
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    driving long distances
    from one treatment center to another,
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    searching for the best option,
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    and above all, never giving up,
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    despite the difficulties he encountered,
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    including from a work
    and quality-of-life perspective.
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    That was my father.
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    I recovered, and this is largely
    thanks to his dedication.
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    This experience turned me
    into a patient advocate.
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    The closer I looked, the more I saw
    carers providing the same kind of support
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    that my father provided to me,
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    and playing a crucial role
    in the healthcare system.
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    I don't think it's an exaggeration to say
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    that without informal carers like him,
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    our health and social systems
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    would crumble.
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    And yet, they're largely
    going unrecognized.
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    I am now a long-distance
    carer for my mother,
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    who suffers from multiple
    chronic conditions.
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    I understand, now more than ever,
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    the demands that caregivers face.
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    With aging populations,
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    economic instability,
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    healthcare system stress
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    and increased incidents
    of long-term chronic care needs,
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    the importance and demands
    on family caregivers
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    are greater than ever.
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    Carers all over the world
    are sacrificing their own physical,
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    financial and psychosocial well-being
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    to provide care for their loved ones.
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    Carers have their own limits and needs,
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    and in absence of adequate support,
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    many could be stretched
    to the breaking point.
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    Once seen as a personal
    and private matter in family life,
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    unpaid caregiving has formed
    the invisible backbone
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    of our health and social systems
    all over the world.
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    Many of these carers
    are even in this room,
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    as we have just seen.
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    Who are they, and how many are they?
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    What are the challenges
    that they are facing?
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    And, above all, how can we make sure
    that their value to patients,
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    our healthcare system and society
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    is recognized?
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    Anyone can be a carer, really:
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    a 15-year-old girl caring
    for a parent with multiple sclerosis;
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    a 40-year-old man juggling full-time work
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    while caring for his family
    who lives far away;
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    a 60-year-old man caring for his wife
    who has terminal cancer;
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    or an 80-year-old woman
    caring for her husband
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    who has Alzheimer's disease.
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    The things carers do
    for their patients are varied.
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    They provide personal care,
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    like getting someone dressed,
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    feeding them,
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    helping them to the bathroom,
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    helping them move about.
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    They also provide a significant
    level of medical care,
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    because they often know a lot about
    their loved one's condition and needs,
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    sometimes better
    than the patients themselves,
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    who may be paralyzed
    or confused by their diagnosis.
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    In those situations,
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    carers are also advocates for the patient.
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    Also of critical importance
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    is the fact that carers
    also provide emotional support.
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    They organize doctor's appointments,
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    they manage finances,
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    and they also deal
    with daily household tasks.
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    These challenges are challenges
    that we can't ignore.
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    There are currently
    more than 100 million carers
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    providing 80 percent
    of care across Europe.
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    And even if these numbers are impressive,
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    they're most likely underestimated,
    given the lack of recognition of carers.
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    As we have just seen,
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    many of you in this room weren't sure
    if you could be qualified
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    or considered to be a carer.
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    Many of you probably thought
    I was referring to a nurse
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    or some other healthcare professional.
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    Also stunning
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    are the benefits that carers
    bring to our societies.
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    I want to give you just one example
    from Australia in 2015.
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    The annual value
    provided by informal carers
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    to those suffering from mental illness
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    was evaluated at 13.2 billion
    Australian dollars.
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    This is nearly two times
    what the Australian government spends
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    on mental health services annually.
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    These numbers, among others,
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    demonstrate that if carers
    were to stop caring tomorrow,
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    our health and social systems
    would crumble.
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    And while the importance
    of these millions of silent carers
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    cannot be denied,
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    they've largely been unnoticed
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    by governments, healthcare systems
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    and private entities.
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    In addition, carers are facing
    enormous personal challenges.
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    Many carers face higher costs
    and can face financial difficulties,
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    given the fact that they may not
    be able to work full time
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    or they may not be able
    to hold down a job altogether.
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    Many studies have shown
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    that often carers sacrifice
    their own health and well-being
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    in order to care for their loved ones.
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    Many carers spend so much time
    caring for their loved ones
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    that often their family
    and their relationships can suffer.
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    Many carers report that often,
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    their employers don't have
    adequate policies in place
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    to support them.
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    There has been improvement, though,
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    in the recognition
    of carers around the world.
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    Just a few years ago,
    an umbrella organization
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    called the International Alliance
    of Carer Organizations, or IACO,
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    was formed to bring together
    carer groups from all over the world,
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    to provide strategic direction,
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    facilitate information sharing,
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    as well as actively advocate
    for carers on an international level.
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    Private entities are also starting
    to recognize the situation of carers.
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    I am proud that my personal engagement
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    and enthusiasm towards
    this topic of carers
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    found an echo in my own workplace.
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    My company is committed to this cause
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    and has developed
    an unprecedented framework
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    for its employees and society as a whole.
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    The objective is to empower carers
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    to improve their own health and well-being
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    and bring about a greater
    balance to their lives.
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    Nevertheless, much more needs to be done
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    to complement these relatively
    isolated initiatives.
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    Our societies are facing
    increased health pressures,
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    including aging populations,
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    increased incidence of cancer
    and chronic conditions,
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    widespread inequality,
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    amongst many others.
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    To confront these challenges,
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    policymakers must look beyond
    traditional healthcare pathways
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    and employment policies
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    and recognize that informal care
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    will continue to form the bedrock of care.
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    Caring for someone should be a choice
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    and should be done without putting
    one's own well-being in the balance.
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    But to really put the care
    back into health care,
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    what's needed is a deep,
    societal, structural change.
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    And this can only happen
    through a change in mindset.
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    And this can start today.
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    Today, we can plant the seed for a change
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    for millions of carers around the world.
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    Here's what I want to suggest:
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    when you go home today
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    or to the office tomorrow morning,
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    embrace a carer.
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    Thank them,
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    offer him or her a bit of help,
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    maybe even volunteer as a carer yourself
    for a couple hours a week.
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    If carers around the world
    felt better recognized,
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    it would not only improve
    their own health and well-being
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    and sense of fulfillment,
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    but it would also improve the lives
    of those that they're caring for.
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    Let's care more.
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause)
Title:
The hidden role informal caregivers play in health care
Speaker:
Scott Williams
Description:

more » « less
Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
09:30

English subtitles

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