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Module 7

Planning for Sustainability

The caregiver is not an unlimited resource

This is one of the most important principles in caregiving, and one of the most frequently ignored. Families often build care plans that implicitly rely on one person being available indefinitely, without time limits, at whatever intensity is required. That plan will fail.

The caregiver is not an unlimited resource. A care plan that does not account for the carer's own limits, needs, and sustainability is not a complete plan.

What wears carers down

  • Time — caregiving often expands to fill all available hours, including nights and weekends
  • Emotional strain — grief, guilt, frustration, and the weight of watching someone decline
  • Physical demands — particularly where personal care or mobility support is involved
  • Work and financial pressure — reduced hours, career interruption, or lost income
  • Isolation — stepping back from friendships, social life, and personal interests
  • Absence of backup — carrying the full responsibility without anyone to step in

Build sustainability into the plan

Sustainability is not about doing less. It is about building the structure that allows the caring role to continue without burning out the people who carry it. That means identifying limits early, putting backup in place, and asking for help before the crisis, not after it.

Respite and escalation

Respite — planned breaks from caring — is not a luxury. It is a maintenance requirement. Build in regular relief, identify who can cover, and have a clear escalation plan for when care needs intensify beyond current capacity.

Questions to think through

  • Is the primary carer's current workload realistic over the next six to twelve months?
  • What would happen to the care arrangement if the primary carer became ill or unavailable?
  • Is there a regular break built into the plan — or is the carer expected to continue indefinitely without relief?
  • Are the financial, employment, and health impacts on the carer being monitored and managed?
  • Is help being asked for early — or is the carer waiting until they reach a breaking point?

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