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It is with great pleasure that I introduce Howard Gleckman, author of Caring for Our Parents. For those of you who have not read his recent book, it is simply fascinating. Howard’s experience and approach as a journalist, combined with his obvious passion for elder care delivers an educational volume that is dense with fact and deep with emotion.
In this 31 minute interview, Howard and I discuss the motivation for his book and the personal stories of several families he interviewed during his research. Howard also introduces several different models of elder care that are beginning to show real promise. As a journalist who has covered the Washington beat for many years, I couldn’t let him off the hook with his predictions for health care legislation.
I hope you enjoy the interview as much as I did. Howard’s goal, as he put it, is to inspire people to stand up, get mad and do something about the current state of elder care. I think he achieves that with both his prior work and Caring for Our Parents.
Thank you for being a Leader in Elder Care, Howard!
About Howard Gleckman (in Howard’s Words)
I’ve wanted to write Caring for Our Parents for more than a decade, since my wife Ann and I helped care for her dad and mine.
I’ve written many short pieces about long-term care over the years, including some for Business Week, where I was senior correspondent in the magazine’s Washington bureau. I covered health and elder care as well as tax and budget issues there for nearly 20 years.
But this story needed more than short magazine articles. And I didn’t want to write a how-to book. I had a different project in mind: a close-up, personal look at our nation’s dysfunctional system of delivering and paying for this assistance. And I wanted to tell this powerful story through the eyes of real families.
My chance to write Caring for Our Parents came in 2006 when I received a media fellowship from the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. At about the same time, I became a Visiting Fellow at the Center for Retirement Research at Boston College and began writing for Kiplinger’s Retirement Report and other publications.
That gave me the opportunity to take a leave from Business Week and work full-time researching, reporting, and writing about the subject I felt so passionately about: long-term care services.
It was two years from my first preliminary interviews until I delivered a finished manuscript to St. Martin’s Press. I spent most of that time interviewing families and long-term care experts. But I also used the opportunity to volunteer. I became a senior advisor to Caring from a Distance, a non-profit organization that provides Web-based and telephone-assistance to long-distance caregivers; I helped give advice to seniors and their families at the Jewish Council for the Aging of Greater Washington; and I serve as co-chair of the Medical Quality Committee at Suburban Hospital in Bethesda, Md. and as an advisory member of the hospital’s Board of Directors.
As my work on the book wound down, I took on another exciting challenge: I started a blog on economic and fiscal policy called TaxVox. I’m now spending about half of my time as a senior research associate at the Urban Institute, consultant to the Brookings Institution, and editor of TaxVox.
I’ve also continued most of my volunteer work, and I’m spending lots of time writing and speaking on long-term care. Sometimes, I lecture to professional groups such as The National Council on Aging, the American Society on Aging, and the National Academy of Elder Care Attorneys. But my favorite audiences are made up of seniors and their adult children.
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Aloha,
What more can you tell us about: “Caring from a Distance, a non-profit organization that provides Web-based and telephone-assistance to long-distance caregivers..”
We’re looking for a reliable and affordable video system for connecting our future members with their friends, family, and healthcare providers.
Ryan,
What an incredible interview! Howard has had an incredible career, is insightful and you can tell how dedicated he is to our seniors & their families.
What an awesome idea for highlighting some of the brightest minds who a helping to pave the way for better care for our aging loved ones. Kudos to you. I can’t wait for more interviews.
Mark Hager
Peter, I am not familiar with Caring from a Distance, but will see if i can poke around a bit. For now, I would recommend posting a question on LinkedIn and see what other peoples’ experience looks like.
Mark – Thanks much, feel free to spread the word.