Caregiving Guides for Families
Structured guides on the topics adult children are quietly navigating — written to give families a clear, steady starting point. Each guide accompanies an issue of The Care Standard.
Home Safety Checklist for Aging Parents: Room by Room
This practical room-by-room guide helps families look at a parent's home with fresh eyes. From the entryway and hallway to the bathroom, bedroom, kitchen, and living room, it outlines simple safety checks that can support aging at home with more confidence.
The article also includes a "Normal vs. Not Normal" comparison, conversation tips, and common questions families ask when they are trying to make a parent's home safer without making the home feel clinical or unfamiliar.
7 Signs Your Aging Parent May Need More Support at Home
Knowing the signs aging parent needs help at home is rarely straightforward. Most families don't notice one dramatic moment — they notice a quiet accumulation of small changes that, together, start to form a picture worth paying attention to.
This guide walks through seven signs worth noticing, a Normal vs. Worth Noticing comparison, and how to start the conversation — for families who are in that space right now, before a crisis shapes anything.
Sharing the Caregiving Load: A Guide for Families Who Are Already Trying
When everyone in a family is contributing to a parent's care, something can still feel off. Not effort, there's plenty of that. What's often missing is a shared picture: who is doing what, who holds the full picture, and what happens when the arrangement starts to feel thin.
This guide helps families make the caregiving load visible, clarify roles, and build simple systems that make coordination steadier — without overcomplicating what is already working.
Signs a Parent Needs Memory Care: What Families Need to Know
If you've found yourself quietly watching your parent's memory and wondering whether what you're seeing is normal — you're not alone. This guide breaks down what to look for, how to tell the difference between normal aging and memory loss that signals something more, and what steps families can take when they're ready to begin.