
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
The vast majority of care recipients are exclusively receiving unpaid care from a family member, friend, or neighbor. The rest receive a combination of family care and paid assistance, or exclusively paid formal care.
Whether you’re a paid home care provider, or rely on personal assistance to meet your daily needs, or a family member caring for a loved one, the nature of the working relationship depends on mutual respect and dignity. On this edition of Making Contact, we’ll explore the dynamic and complex relationship of care receiving and giving.
Featuring:
Credits
Photo Credits:
Music Credit:
Resources:
Segment Descriptions:
Community Storytelling Fellow, Alice Wong asks, how do people with disabilities who rely on personal assistance negotiate their relationships with the people that assist them? And how does that inform their sense of independence or interdependence with others? In this next story from the San Francisco Bay Area, Wong searches for answers.
http://www.prx.org/pieces/176039-choreography-of-care
A Lifetime of Caregiving: Mom and Uncle Harold
Most often family members are the ones that step up and provide care when a parent or loved one needs it. According to the Family Caregiver Alliance, 78 percent of care beneficiaries receive assistance from a family member, friend, or neighbor. Alta Mae Stevens is 87 years old. From the moment she married she’s been caring for one person or another. Her daughter Stephanie Guyer-Stevens talks to her about what a lifetime of caregiving has meant to her.
http://www.radioproject.org/sound/2016/MakingCon_160413_a_lifetime_of_caregiving.mp3
http://www.prx.org/pieces/176040-a-lifetime-of-caregiving-mom-and-uncle-harold
The post Caring Relationships: Negotiating Meaning and Maintaining Dignity ENCORE appeared first on KPFA.
5
77 ratings
The vast majority of care recipients are exclusively receiving unpaid care from a family member, friend, or neighbor. The rest receive a combination of family care and paid assistance, or exclusively paid formal care.
Whether you’re a paid home care provider, or rely on personal assistance to meet your daily needs, or a family member caring for a loved one, the nature of the working relationship depends on mutual respect and dignity. On this edition of Making Contact, we’ll explore the dynamic and complex relationship of care receiving and giving.
Featuring:
Credits
Photo Credits:
Music Credit:
Resources:
Segment Descriptions:
Community Storytelling Fellow, Alice Wong asks, how do people with disabilities who rely on personal assistance negotiate their relationships with the people that assist them? And how does that inform their sense of independence or interdependence with others? In this next story from the San Francisco Bay Area, Wong searches for answers.
http://www.prx.org/pieces/176039-choreography-of-care
A Lifetime of Caregiving: Mom and Uncle Harold
Most often family members are the ones that step up and provide care when a parent or loved one needs it. According to the Family Caregiver Alliance, 78 percent of care beneficiaries receive assistance from a family member, friend, or neighbor. Alta Mae Stevens is 87 years old. From the moment she married she’s been caring for one person or another. Her daughter Stephanie Guyer-Stevens talks to her about what a lifetime of caregiving has meant to her.
http://www.radioproject.org/sound/2016/MakingCon_160413_a_lifetime_of_caregiving.mp3
http://www.prx.org/pieces/176040-a-lifetime-of-caregiving-mom-and-uncle-harold
The post Caring Relationships: Negotiating Meaning and Maintaining Dignity ENCORE appeared first on KPFA.
156 Listeners
197 Listeners
46 Listeners
57 Listeners
53 Listeners
56 Listeners
258 Listeners
50 Listeners
22 Listeners
21 Listeners