FINDS Report Reveals Family Caregiver Stress

Source: Association of University Centers on Disabilities

Download the FINDS (Family & Individual Needs for Disability Supports) Community Report for 2017 (PDF) here.In 2017, the Research and Training Center on Community Living (RTC/CL) at the Institute on Community Integration (Minnesota’s University Center for Excellence in Developmental Disabilities) conducted an online survey in collaboration with The Arc of the United States in order to better understand the status of family caregivers of individuals with intellectual and developmental disabilities (I/DD) in the U.S. Known as the Family & Individual Needs for Disability Support (FINDS) study, the survey and newly released FINDS Community Report 2017 (PDF) shed light on the experiences of families who provide supports to a family member with I/DD.

“Participants in the FINDS study reflect the ever-increasing reliance on families to provide the bulk of supports to individuals with IDD,” notes lead author, Lynda Lahti Anderson of the RTC/CL. The workforce crisis and lack of supports such as respite can challenge both the caregivers and the individuals receiving supports. Caregivers reported economic stresses such as needing to quit work, reduce hours, or turn down promotions in order to provide care, as well as impacts on their own health and well-being. Compounding the reliance on families to provide long-term supports is the aging population of caregivers. “One of the primary roles of families has always been to provide support and care to family members,” says Anderson. “The results of the FINDS survey highlight the scope, intensity, and duration of the supports provided by family members, particularly parents, of both children and adults with intellectual or developmental disabilities. Policies that support family caregivers to reduce economic and other impacts are critical.”