The Importance of Honoring Family Caregiver Burden: Challenges in Mental Health Care Delivery.

J Clin Psychol Med Settings

Department of Psychiatry, UMass Memorial Cancer Center, 55 Lake Avenue North, Worcester, MA, 01655, USA.

Published: October 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • There is a growing acknowledgment of the mental health struggles faced by the 53 million family caregivers in the U.S., leading to a demand for better access to psychosocial support.
  • Family caregivers are turning to hospital-based counseling services, but mental health professionals encounter challenges in providing and billing for this specialized care.
  • The paper highlights three main issues: caregiver burden isn't a formal diagnosis, documentation often ties caregivers' needs to patient care, and broader systemic barriers hinder effective mental health integration for caregivers.

Article Abstract

There is growing recognition of the profound mental health challenges faced by the 53 million U.S. family caregivers, and the need for increased access to psychosocial care for this vulnerable population. Family caregivers are increasingly seeking support from hospital-based counseling centers. This trend-combined with a public policy landscape that promotes the delivery of caregiver-specific supports and services-highlights challenges faced by mental health professionals to provide and bill for psychosocial care to family caregivers. In this paper, we discuss three interrelated challenges that mental health professionals face in providing care to family caregivers and which our field needs to confront as healthcare transfers more responsibilities onto the shoulders of family caregivers: (1) caregiver burden is not recognized as a formal diagnosis; (2) current documentation for caregivers is typically linked to patient encounters; and (3) support for family caregivers occurs within larger systematic barriers to mental health integration. By accurately describing and documenting caregiver burden and advocating for increased parity in mental health coverage, we hope that the field can bridge the gap between emerging research, momentum in policy, and available psychosocial services for this vulnerable population.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10880-024-10051-3DOI Listing

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