A caregiver provides assistance in
meeting the daily needs of another person. Responsibilities may range from bathing,
dressing, assisting with mobility, preparing meals, dispensing medicines, and
communicating with medical staff. Caregivers can be paid caregivers who have had
training and education in providing care. This may include services from home health
agencies and other trained professionals.
Family caregivers provide care
usually without being paid. Caregivers may provide care for an aging parent, spouse,
other relative, or unrelated person, or for an ill, or disabled person, often in the
home. Caregiving tasks may include transportation, grocery shopping, housework,
preparing meals. It may also involve help with getting dressed, getting out of bed,
eating, and incontinence.
According to a 2020 report from the
AARP and the National Alliance for Caregiving (NAC), more than 1 in 5 Americans have
provided care to either to a child with special needs or an adult in the past 12
months.
Most caregivers (89%) are related
to the care recipient with about half caring for a parent. About 3 in 50 caregivers
provide care to an adult child with special needs.