In Washington, D.C., Maurice White, 75, and Renee DeVigne, 68, have spent decades caring for elders—12 in all, including White’s mother, Evelyn, who turned 104 in October and recently returned home after a stroke and rehab. Their story sits inside a national squeeze: longer lives, fewer children, and a caregiver workforce already in short supply. Costs are steep—median annual home aide more than $68,000, assisted living above $64,000—and Medicaid waitlists top 700,000. Advocates warn the system is at a tipping point. For White and DeVigne, one thing endures: care rooted in connection.
Reviewed by JQJO team
#demographics #elderly #caregiving #population #challenge
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