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IntroductionArkansas StatisticsArkansas Disability Statistics. Size and characteristics of the PAS workforce in Arkansas. Wages for Personal & Home Care Aides in Arkansas. State Program DataMedicaid Waiver Data in Arkansas. Federal HCBS Funding to Arkansas. State Only Funded HCBS in Arkansas. State Waiver Demo Information. Arkansas Legal InformationArkansas Olmstead Plans and Lawsuits. Arkansas PAS ProjectsResearch/Demo Projects to Improve PAS Workforce. Arkansas ResourcesContact Info and Descriptions for all Arkansas Medicaid Waivers. Arkansas Agencies Related to PAS. Arkansas resources for employment of persons with disabilities. Arkansas LibraryPAS Reports and Publications related to Arkansas. Arkansas PAS Workforce Library. Arkansas Links |
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Arkansas: Estimated number of PAS workers and workers per persons with self-care difficultyEstimates for 2003(Updated from 2002 data on 2/18/2005)In Arkansas there are an estimated 12,792 home and personal care workers (4.8 per 1,000 people). For each 1,000 people with self-care difficulty, there are an estimated 126.3 home and personal care workers.
Source: Center for Personal Assistance Services, tabulations of public use microdata from the 2002 American Community Survey. View or print a table with all US states. Home and Personal Care Workers by StateSusan Chapman, Stephen Kaye, and Robert Newcomer (Choose a state for detail of estimated PAS workers and workers per persons with self-care difficulty) The American Community Survey provides estimates of demographic, housing, social, and economic characteristics for all states and is conducted using a survey of sample households throughout the U.S. Occupational data is collected using the occupational classification system developed for the 2000 census. This classification system includes 509 occupational categories in 23 major occupational groups. In contrast to the Occupational Employment Statistics Survey (OES) conducted by the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the ACS is particularly useful in estimating the number of personal care workers because it includes workers who are self-employed or unpaid family workers. We used the major occupation grouping Personal Care and Service Organizations to estimate the number of personal care workers. Within that major grouping we selected workers in the in the categories of Personal and Home Care Aides and Personal Care and Service Workers. While these overall estimates of workers who provide personal assistance services may be lower than the actual number of individuals involved in this type of work, we believe that these data represent the best estimates we have on a national base that also allow state by state comparison.
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