# Needed and Received Home/Community-Based Services: Experiences of Rural Caregivers of Older Veterans

**Authors:** Elizabeth Chamberlin, Steve Shirk, Victoria Ngo, Elizabeth Marfeo, Lauren Moo

PMC · DOI: 10.1093/geroni/igaf122.2656 · Innovation in Aging · 2025-12-31

## TL;DR

Rural caregivers of older Veterans face challenges in accessing home/community-based services, despite similar needs to urban caregivers.

## Contribution

The study reveals disparities in service access between rural and urban caregivers of older Veterans.

## Key findings

- Rural caregivers showed greater interest in respite services compared to urban caregivers.
- Urban caregivers were more likely to receive support and community services than rural caregivers.
- Rural areas lack sufficient services, risking the health of older Veterans and increasing institutionalization.

## Abstract

The lack of nursing homes and assisted living facilities and the wish to age at home has led to an exponential rise in informal (family, friends) caregivers. Thus, home/community-based programs and services are vital resources to keep people in their homes. As a large population of informal caregivers and care recipients live in rural locales, it is important to determine if locality matters. A national survey of informal caregivers of older (≥65) Veterans (N = 511 [rural=258, urban=253]) found no significant difference between rural and urban caregivers’ interest in types of service, with the exception that rural caregivers were more interested in respite services than urban caregivers. No difference based on location for those who actively searched for services (N = 226) (estimate = -0.11, p = 0.2058, OR = 0.80). Among the services searched for, respite was significantly different for rural and urban, with searches for this service approximately half as unlikely for those residing in urban communities, OR = 0.53. Urban caregivers reported receiving caregiver support, community, and helping services more than rural caregivers, with urban caregivers approximately three times as likely to have received support (OR = 3.01) and over twice as likely to have received community and helping services (OR = 2.35 and OR = 2.32, respectively) than their rural counterparts. These findings highlight the unevenness in services needed and those received by caregivers’ locality. The lack of services in rural areas can decrease the overall health of older rural Veterans and lead to institutionalization.

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12760762