To save time and money, companies roll out caregiving
benefits
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[March 04, 2019]
By Beth Pinsker
NEW YORK (Reuters) - When Laura Hirsch of
Keller Texas had to find a rehabilitation center to help her father
recover from a difficult surgery in September, the caregiving service
Cariloop saved her a whole day.
A case manager at Cariloop, based in Richardson, Texas, sorted through
more than a dozen rehab facility options, then armed Hirsch with the
right questions to ask when choosing among the final contenders.
Hirsch, 55, saved time, and was also grateful to be relieved of the
emotional burden of visiting subpar facilities to cross them off the
list.
"She saved me all of that," said Hirsch, a private customer who pays
$600 a year to Cariloop. The benefit of such a service is now starting
to draw many companies to offer caregiving services to employees.
In addition to Cariloop, companies such as Wellthy and Torchlight
provide caregiving coordination and support. Others offer short-term
backup care for both children and adults, including Care.com's Care@Work
program.
Best Buy Co Inc signed up with Care@Work after an in-house survey showed
the thing employees wanted most was flexibility to care for sick loved
ones.
The Care@Work platform gives workers access to backup care from
Care.com's vetted providers, along with a senior care concierge service.
The employer typically covers the subscription cost and subsidizes
per-use care cost, said Sheila Marcelo, founder and CEO of Care.com.
Best Buy also implemented paid caregiver leave of up to four weeks for
loved ones. Last week, the Richfield, Minnesota based company announced
it is rolling out paid time off for part-time workers.
"People are able to spend the final days of a parent's life with them,
and they wouldn't have been able to do that otherwise," said Melanie
Moriarty, a senior director in human resources at Best Buy. "We hear so
many heartwarming stories."
CONCIERGE HELP
At News Corp., backup childcare is provided by Bright Horizons, which
also includes an eldercare component.
Because that benefit was limited to just the caregiving, the company
added access to Wellthy this year for a concierge caregiving approach.
"One of the hardest parts is logistics. If you are suddenly in a
position to figure out schedules, doctors, pharmacy and transportation
needs - most of it is out of the skill set of the individual," said
Marco Diaz, senior vice president, global head of benefits at News Corp.
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A Best Buy store is pictured in Pasadena, California U.S., February
28, 2017. REUTERS/Mario Anzuoni
A service like Wellthy will step in and help a family coordinate caregiving.
While an employee can call up with something as simple as finding an allergist,
the biggest impact is dealing with complex care situations like dementia, said
Wellthy founder and CEO Lindsay Jurist-Rosner.
Much of the coordination is app based, with a shared dashboard family members
can access to see things like dosages, appointment times and test results.
Wellthy has been serving corporate customers since 2016 and reaches about
200,000 employees collectively. Private pay costs $300 for six months. An
independent care manager can run about $150 per hour, by contrast.
MEASURING RESULTS
Torchlight, based in Burlington, Massachusetts, assesses its value to 100 or so
corporate clients in costs saved through efficiency. Clients include Alameda
Health System, Dell, TripAdvisor and AmGen, with the service accessible to more
than 1 million employees in the United States. About 10 to 12 percent of
employees open a case, the company said.
Case managers can steer clients toward services in the public domain for special
needs children, for example, and deal with insurance coverage, said Adam Golderg,
Torchlight's founder and CEO. One financial services company estimated it saved
about $400,000 in cost offsets, Goldberg added.
Cariloop measures its impact through the time it saves for clients, which they
could then use to be more productive at work.
"If it takes us one hour to do something, it would take the client four," said
Cariloop CEO Michael Walsh.
So if you have an employee making $75,000 a year and you save them 48 hours of
time over six months, that's nearly $2,000. If you are a law firm with partners
earning $500 an hour, the cost savings would go way up, Walsh said.
For a family, the emotional help can offer the greatest value. Hirsch is about
to go on a cruise, one week she takes every year with friends.
"If something happens with my father, my daughter can step in, and she can pull
up all this information - his will, powers of attorney, medications, anything
that is important to him," Hirsch said. "It's huge."
(Editing by Lauren Young and David Gregorio)
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