Gusoff Geoffrey M, Cuevas Miguel A, Sarkisian Catherine, Sterling Madeline R, Avgar Ariel C, Ryan Gery W
Department of Family Medicine, David Geffen School of Medicine at the University of California, Los Angeles.
Division of General Internal Medicine and Health Services Research, David Geffen School of Medicine at University of California, Los Angeles.
JAMA Netw Open. 2025 Apr 1;8(4):e254457. doi: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2025.4457.
To safely age at home, millions of older adults rely on the services of home care workers (HCWs), a workforce marked by poor working conditions, high turnover, and critical worker shortages. Home care cooperatives-businesses co-owned and controlled by HCWs-have demonstrated significantly lower turnover and higher job quality than traditional home care businesses, but the factors associated with these outcomes have not been investigated.
To identify potential factors associated with higher job quality and lower turnover at home care cooperatives.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: In this qualitative study, semistructured interviews were conducted in English from November 2023 to June 2024. To be eligible for the study, participants had to be 18 years old or older, speak English, and currently be employed by a home care cooperative. Interviews were conducted remotely over Zoom with individual HCWs and staff from home care cooperatives from across the US. Data were analyzed from May to July 2024.
Employment at a home care cooperative.
Interviews were audio recorded and transcribed. A thematic analysis approach was used to code interviews and identify major themes and subthemes, informed by a conceptual model of direct care worker job outcomes.
A total of 23 HCWs and 9 staff members (14 participants aged 20-39 years [44%]; 8 [25%] African American, 4 [13%] Latinx, and 17 [53%] non-Latinx White) from 5 home care cooperatives participated in the study. Participants identified 4 key aspects of the cooperative work environment they perceived to be contributing to higher job quality and lower turnover compared with traditional agencies: (1) greater workplace control regarding patient care, case assignments, and organizational policies; (2) stronger community support and camaraderie; (3) a deeper culture of respect in which HCWs felt more valued; and (4) higher overall compensation in the form of wages, benefits, or profit sharing.
In this qualitative study of HCWs and staff at home care cooperatives, participants perceived cooperatives' relatively high levels of HCW control, community, respect, and compensation to be important contributors to HCWs' retention in the field. The participatory structure and practices of home care cooperatives in these areas may represent novel approaches for home care agencies to reduce HCW turnover and improve job quality to address critical workforce shortages.
为了能安全地居家养老,数百万老年人依赖家庭护理工作者(HCW)的服务,而这一劳动力群体面临着工作条件差、人员流动率高和严重的劳动力短缺问题。家庭护理合作社——由家庭护理工作者共同拥有和控制的企业——与传统家庭护理企业相比,人员流动率显著更低,工作质量更高,但与这些结果相关的因素尚未得到研究。
确定与家庭护理合作社工作质量较高和人员流动率较低相关的潜在因素。
设计、背景和参与者:在这项定性研究中,于2023年11月至2024年6月以英语进行了半结构化访谈。符合研究条件的参与者必须年满18岁,会说英语,且目前受雇于家庭护理合作社。通过Zoom对来自美国各地家庭护理合作社的个体家庭护理工作者和工作人员进行远程访谈。在2024年5月至7月对数据进行分析。
在家庭护理合作社工作。
访谈进行了录音和转录。采用主题分析方法对访谈进行编码,并根据直接护理工作者工作结局的概念模型确定主要主题和子主题。
来自5家家庭护理合作社的23名家庭护理工作者和9名工作人员(14名参与者年龄在20 - 39岁之间[44%];8名[25%]非裔美国人,4名[13%]拉丁裔,17名[53%]非拉丁裔白人)参与了该研究。参与者确定了他们认为与传统机构相比,合作社工作环境中有助于提高工作质量和降低人员流动率的4个关键方面:(1)在患者护理、病例分配和组织政策方面有更大的工作场所控制权;(2)更强的社区支持和同志情谊;(3)更深厚的尊重文化,让家庭护理工作者感到更受重视;(4)以工资、福利或利润分享形式提供的更高总体薪酬。
在这项针对家庭护理合作社的家庭护理工作者和工作人员的定性研究中,参与者认为合作社相对较高的家庭护理工作者控制权、社区、尊重和薪酬水平是家庭护理工作者留在该领域的重要因素。家庭护理合作社在这些领域的参与式结构和做法可能代表了家庭护理机构减少家庭护理工作者流动率和提高工作质量以解决严重劳动力短缺问题的新方法。