Archive for ‘career advancement’

Why So Many of Us Don’t Have Health Care Insurance

Posted by on November 11th, 2009 at 12:53 pm | 4 Comments »
Don Krutsinger

Don Krutsinger

I work as a direct support professional with developmentally disabled adults in residential settings. One thing I have in common with just about all my coworkers is that we need to work more than 40 hours a week to make ends meet – and even so, too many of us can’t afford our employers’ health care coverage.

With the recent cutbacks by our state (Minnesota), most of our residential programs have cut out overtime and cut down the number of full-time positions, reducing the number of positions that receive health insurance and paid time off. That means nearly all of us have to work two to three jobs to make ends meet. Chances are, we don’t get enough hours from any one of them to qualify for health insurance. That’s a difficult, demoralizing way to live, especially for those of us who are dedicated to direct support work and have invested years of our lives in our careers. Continue reading »

My Voices Institute Experience in a Word: AWESOME

Posted by on October 26th, 2009 at 11:32 pm | 2 Comments »
Linda Longsine

Linda Longsine

A is for the admiration I received
W is for the wonderful people
E is for everything I appreciate about the people of the DCA
S is for that special someone who gave confidence that I could do it
O is for the one thing that made a big difference in my life
M is for the many new friendships I made
E is for the experience that will make me a whole lot better person

Linda Longsine
Voices Institute NLP Class of 2009

DCA Video Diary: Renee Tillman

Posted by on October 15th, 2009 at 9:31 am | 3 Comments »

Before heading to DC with the DCA this spring, CNA Renee Tillman, the founder and president of the Texas Association of Nurse Assistants, asked her colleagues what they wanted her to tell legislators about direct care work. Here’s what they said.

Voices Institute NLP Graduates New Crop of Direct Care Worker Leaders

Posted by on October 15th, 2009 at 9:05 am | 3 Comments »
DCA board chair Vera Salter teaching members of the 2009 class

DCA board chair Vera Salter teaching members of the 2009 class

“Let the root thrive” was the birthing motto of the Voices Institute inaugural class, inspired by the lakeside location of the DeKoven Center in Wisconsin, where the first graduates launched DCA’s signature National Leadership Program (NLP) to turbo-charge direct care worker leadership and activism.

When I wrote, after the first class graduated, that the inaugural program was one “historic and successful step forward for the movement to empower direct care workers and to fix our broken long-term care system,” I was dreaming of the possibilities. From September 27 through October 3 of this year, direct care workers once again proved their capacity to make the seemingly impossible happen, and to claim the respect they deserve as professionals. The roots are thriving at the state and national level, and the new class of graduates have a place from where to build national policy success. Continue reading »

My Voices Institute Experience in a Word: BELIEF

Posted by on October 15th, 2009 at 8:42 am | 1 Comment »
Connie Kreider with fellow graduate Tony Wells at the 2009 VI NLP

Connie Kreider with fellow graduate Tony Wells at the 2009 VI NLP

B– breathing and inhaling the amazing week
E– entering and walking down a new path of leadership
L–learning and leaving footprints for others to follow
I–internal peace and tranquility
E–experiencing renewed strength and feeling blessed by walking on hallowed ground
F–friends for a lifetime, feelings of one unbreakable strength and renewed passion

Connie Kreider
Voices Institute NLP Class of 2009

My Voices Institute Experience in a Word: ENLIGHTENING

Posted by on October 15th, 2009 at 8:39 am | 1 Comment »
Pat Downing

Pat Downing

E is for encouraging us to change
N is for new core beliefs developed
L is for the love we have for being DCWs
I is for I believe in myself
G is for all the good changes we can make
H is for our hearts of gold
T is for teambuilding skills we learned
E is for effective advocating
N is for all negative beliefs left behind
I is for inspiring us to change
N is for new friendships made
G is for our growing edge as leaders 

Pat Downing
Voices Institute NLP Class of 2009

Direct Support Workers Launch New NADSP Affiliate

Posted by on September 19th, 2009 at 2:20 am | 1 Comment »
Shannon Gilbert

Shannon Gilbert

It’s official! The Direct Support Professionals of Indiana, better known as DSPIN, is the newest affiliate of the National Alliance for Direct Support Professionals (NADSP).

We submitted our contract agreement to NADSP on August 17. Before long, we were on their website, listed as one of their state affiliates.

But there was a lot of work to do before that happened, and there’s a lot more to be done.

I told you about our first meeting, where we had a kind of informal focus group, talking to the direct support workers and others who showed up about potential obstacles to setting up a state association and ways to get around them.

At our next meeting, we came up with our name and our first board of directors. I got elected president – I tried to give it to someone else, but they all said “No, you have to do it; you’re the one with the idea and all the information.” After that, people stepped up to fill in the slots and do what needed to be done.

There are 10 board members, and they’re all direct support professionals from around the state. I’ve never met any of them before they showed up for our meetings. In fact, I hadn’t even heard of the agencies some of them work for. That’s how distant we DSPs are from each other, most of the time. The more we work together on this, the more we share our stories and realize how much we have in common. It’s a really good peer group connection. Continue reading »

Stimulus Funds Earmarked for Health Care Workforce Development

Posted by on September 9th, 2009 at 2:11 pm | No Comments »

As recommended in a DCA policy brief published this March, the federal government has earmarked part of its economic stimulus funding for strengthening the direct care workforce. Organizations that train or provide career paths for direct care workers have until October 5 to apply for the funds, which are being granted by the U.S. Department of Labor Employment and Training Administration (DOL ETA).

About $125 million, in grants of $2 to $5 million each, will fund training, education, and job placement aimed at preparing workers to enter the health care field.

Related Materials

The DOL ETA grant description and application information

A PHI fact sheet on how to apply for the funding, which summarizes the DOL’s criteria and application process

 The DCA’s Using Recovery Act Funds to Improve Direct Care Jobs and the Quality of Direct Care Services policy brief (PDF)

Career Advancement and Supervisor Training Improve CNA Retention

Posted by on September 9th, 2009 at 1:39 pm | 1 Comment »

win a step up“It appears that the investment that North Carolina is making in quality improvement initiatives is having a positive and significant impact on nursing home performance and the stability of the nurse aide workforce,” says Workplace Interventions, Turnover, and Quality of Care Report.

The June 2009 report analyzes three workplace interventions aimed at improving turnover rates and care quality in North Carolina nursing homes:

  •   The WIN A STEP UP program. This gives nursing assistants an opportunity to advance in their careers and earn additional money by completing a 30-hour curriculum. They also commit to staying in their jobs. In addition, the program provides coaching supervision training for the CNAs’ supervisors.
  •   Culture change initiatives. 15 North Carolina nursing homes a year are granted civil monetary penalty funding to transition from medical-model care to a more homelike environment.
  •   Quality improvement collaborative. About one in five North Carolina nursing homes participate in this effort to improve reduce the rate of pressure sores and the use of restraints.

Continue reading »

Legislators Urged Not Just to Create New Home Care Jobs But to Improve Them

Posted by on August 25th, 2009 at 4:22 pm | No Comments »
Congresswoman Nydia Velazquez

Congresswoman Nydia Velazquez

“We urge you … not only to create a new program, but to create a program that improves the quality of these jobs,” PHI New York Policy Director Carol Rodat told the New York State House Financial Services Housing Subcommittee last month. Rodat was testifying in favor of two proposed bills that would train public housing residents as health care aides for elderly people living in public and subsidized housing.

The bills, the Together We Care Act of 2009 and improvements to the Earnings and Living Opportunities Act, are sponsored by Congresswoman Nydia Velázquez, who sees them as a way to improve access to both health care and jobs for public housing residents.

“This model is very promising, and in fact would provide funds for a program that has been tried – successfully – in the past,” said Rodat in an email interview. “Given the importance of this workforce and the growing number of aging, this proposal makes perfect sense as it marries workforce development with the needs of the residents. Continue reading »