Home Health Care Management & Practice

 

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First published on June 24, 2008
Home Health Care Management & Practice 2008, doi:10.1177/1084822308319686


Article

Actualizing "Professional Altruism": A Comparison of Home Health Care and Hospice Social Workers

William D. Cabin, JD, MSW*

Hunter College

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: williamcabin{at}yahoo.com.


   Abstract
The Medicare home health benefit and the Medicare Hospice Benefit (HMB) differ significantly in social work coverage, with social work being only 1%–2% of national Medicare home health visits compared to about 10% of national HMB visits. There has been some research on the frustrations of home care and hospice social workers. However, there is no research that compares home care and hospice social workers. The article presents results of convenience sample interviews of 34 home care social workers and 42 hospice social workers in New York City from August 2006 to October 2007. The analysis finds that, in contrast to home health social workers, hospice social workers feel more able to actualize their altruism professionally; their professional training is more relevant to actual practice; their patients and caregivers have fewer unmet psychosocial needs; and their care is less constrained, and actually enhanced to a great extent, by payer requirements.


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