Thanksgiving — traditionally a day of companionship and enjoyment — was instead a day of mourning for the family of a couple who were found dead by their daughter Nov. 27 inside their home in the small Down East town of Gouldsboro. Ray Hutchins, 65, longtime caregiver to his 75-year-old wife, Ginger, had shot her and then turned the gun on himself.

No note was left behind, so the exact motivation for the murder-suicide will never be known. Issues that often crop up for family caregivers can be addressed by support services, including training and respite care. But these services won’t make a difference unless the caregiver is willing to tap into them.

Given how our state’s elderly population is burgeoning, it’s virtually certain that others in Maine are facing the same challenges as the Hutchinses — so we all have figure out how to do a better job of getting these carergivers the relief they need.

The typical media image of the family caregiver is the adult child caring for an aging parent. And Patti McCartney, the daughter of Ray and Ginger Hutchins, fits into that scenario. She returned to Maine with her husband and son, living next door to her parents and taking a job with night hours so she could visit several times a day and stay with her mother when her stepfather had medical appointments.

But a growing number of family caregivers are, like Ray Hutchins, doing most or all of the work of caring for a spouse or a partner with a long-term condition. (Ginger Hutchins suffered from painful degenerative arthritis throughout her body.)

And compared to other family caregivers, spousal caregivers are far less likely to seek outside help. People who care for their husband, wife or partner may not even see themselves as caregivers. To them, tending to their loved one’s needs — everything from help with bathing and toileting to wound care and giving IV fluids — as part of their lifelong commitment to one another. What’s more, many spousal caregivers face not just the 24/7 responsibilities of caregiving but also their own ailments. (Ray Hutchins, a Vietnam veteran, had health issues stemming from his exposure to Agent Orange.)

We don’t know whether Ray Hutchins had a mental health diagnosis. However, experts have found that murder-suicides among older couples are typically carried out by depressed men, making it critical for doctors, especially primary care physicians, to identify and treat depression among their male patients.

Unlike mental health providers, there’s no stigma involved in seeing one’s family doctor. They have the trust of their patients, putting them in a good position to ask “Is everything OK? You seem down.” The ongoing relationship gives them a chance to continue the discussion over a period of months and gently encourage the patient to open up about any feelings that may point to mental illness.

Programs aimed at spousal caregivers abound, but nobody has really done research on how to convince people who need this assistance to accept it. That should be the task of federal researchers, and now is the time to move ahead with it.

Copy the Story Link

Only subscribers are eligible to post comments. Please subscribe or login first for digital access. Here’s why.

Use the form below to reset your password. When you've submitted your account email, we will send an email with a reset code.

filed under: