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  2. How to Get Paid to Be a Caregiver for Your Parents - AOL

    www.aol.com/paid-caregiver-parents-165900510.html

    Family members can get paid to be caregivers for their elderly parents through Medicaid, VA benefits, long-term care insurance policies, and caregiver agreements. Family caregivers often face ...

  3. Can You Be Paid To Be A Caregiver For A Family Member ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/finance/paid-caregiver-family-member...

    As emotionally grueling as the strain can be for someone providing care to a family member, it is often matched by equally burdensome financial stress. For America's 48 million unpaid family...

  4. What types of caregiver will Medicare pay for? - AOL

    www.aol.com/types-caregiver-medicare-pay...

    Under Medicare rules, caregivers are qualified healthcare professionals such as nurses or therapists. Medicare does not pay for care from family members, friends, or privately hired home health aides.

  5. Caregiver - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caregiver

    A primary caregiver is the person who takes primary responsibility for someone who cannot care fully for himself or herself. The primary caregiver may be a family member, a trained professional or another individual. Depending on culture there may be various members of the family engaged in care.

  6. Family caregivers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Family_caregivers

    Family caregivers (also known as "family carers") are "relatives, friends, or neighbors who provide assistance related to an underlying physical or mental disability for at-home care delivery and assist in the activities of daily living (ADLs) who are unpaid and have no formal training to provide those services." [1]

  7. Companionship Exemption - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Companionship_Exemption

    The United States Department of Labor (DOL) holds significant discretion over how the companionship exemption is interpreted and applied in the workplace. Under the DOL's current interpretation, the companionship exemption applies to most home care workers (also known as personal care assistants), allowing their employers—unless they are in a state with regulations superseding those at the ...