NY25-01: Home Care Needs and Sources of Care Among Social Security Disability Beneficiaries

Previous research on Social Security Disability (SSDI) and Supplemental Security Income (SSI) beneficiaries has mainly focused on their economic well-being and formal healthcare utilization, neglecting their personal care needs. People with disabilities may need home health care or assistance with personal and instrumental activities of daily living (ADLs/IADLs) such as bathing, dressing, cooking, and cleaning. This care may be provided by family and friends, paid home care aides, or both, and may affect family and household economic security. Because of population and program differences, SSDI and SSI beneficiaries may use paid and informal care in different proportions. This mixed-methods study will use longitudinal data from the Health and Retirement Study to compare the care needs and amount and source of care received by SSDI and SSI beneficiaries, identify differences in care provision by gender, race, and urbanicity, and examine whether receipt of SSDI and SSI benefits is associated with proportion of care received from paid caregivers. To move beyond description into understanding the reasons for families’ care arrangements, we will conduct in-depth interviews with informal caregivers of SSDI/SSI beneficiaries about the economic decisions they face and how SSDI and SSI may affect their employment/caregiving tradeoffs and housing decisions.

Next
Next

NY25-02: Estimating What We Miss about Direct Care Workers’ Employment, Earnings, and Retirement Savings