What Pennsylvania Families Need to Know About Senior Caregiver Burnout

Most family caregivers do not realize they are burned out until they are already running on empty. Senior caregiver burnout does not happen all at once; rather, burnout builds quietly, in the months and years of skipped doctor’s appointments, shortened nights, and ongoing worry about someone else’s wellbeing while your own quietly slips.
Studies show that more than 60% of caregivers experience burnout symptoms, and a recent report found that 23% of Americans said caregiving had made their own health worse. These numbers paint a picture of what happens when caregiving responsibilities grow without enough support to match them.
If you are a Pennsylvania family member who has taken on the role of caregiver for an aging parent or loved one, this is for you.
What Is Senior Caregiver Burnout?
Caregiver burnout is a state of physical, mental, and emotional exhaustion that develops when caregiving demands consistently outpace the support and rest available to the caregiver. Burnout is not a character flaw or a sign that you love your family member any less. Burnout happens to people who give a great deal of themselves over a long period without sufficient replenishment.
Family caregivers are especially at risk because the emotional weight of caring for someone you love adds a layer to the caregiving that professional caregivers are trained to manage. Watching a parent struggle with mobility, memory loss, or chronic illness is hard, and that difficulty often stays even after one becomes skilled at managing their care.








