By Alice Facente, Community Education and Outreach Nurse

Providing care for a loved one can be rewarding but also stressful and exhausting.

According to estimates from the National Alliance for Caregiving, 44.4 million American caregivers (21 percent of the adult population) age 18 and older provide unpaid care to an adult age 18 or older.   Sometimes caregivers are so focused on caring for their loved one they fail to notice problems in their own health.    According to one study, caregivers revealed that their most important unmet needs were finding time for themselves, managing emotional and physical stress, and balancing work and family responsibilities.

“Alone we can do so little; together we can do so much.”
~ Helen Keller

This should be the mantra of every person who becomes a caregiver.

Caregiver stress is a significant and complicated issue.  Here are some tips to relieve caregiver stress:

  • Accept help from others.  Make a list of things that would relieve some of the burden, then let those offering help choose what they want to do from your list.  Let them feel good about helping and supporting you.
  • Speak up.  Don’t expect people to automatically know what you’re feeling.  Involve as many people as you can to share the responsibility.
  • Take some respite time for yourself.  Arrange for someone else to take over caregiving duties for a bit while you get a manicure, go out to a movie theater, do whatever makes you happy.  Professional home health care workers get time off — why shouldn‘t you?
  • Don’t strive for perfection – accept that everything doesn’t have to be perfect.  Make a list of things that are “absolutely necessary” and let other, nonessential things go.

 

Alice Facente is the former Community Education and Outreach Nurse at Backus Hospital.