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Caregiver Demographics

Family caregiving in the United States is large, growing, and under-supported. These numbers define the population GiveCare serves.

Population

  • 63 million Americans provide unpaid care1 — a 45% increase from 53 million in 2015
  • Nearly 1 in 4 adults provides ongoing care
  • 59 million care for adults; 4 million for children with complex conditions

Who they are

Dimension Statistic
Gender 3 in 5 are women
Average age 51
Rural 1 in 5 live in rural areas
Sandwich generation 29% care for an aging parent while raising children

What they carry

Time

  • Average 27 hours/week of care
  • 1 in 4 provide 40+ hours/week — the equivalent of a full-time job on top of whatever else they do

Medical responsibility

  • 55% handle medical or nursing tasks (medication management, wound care, injections, tube feedings)
  • Only 11% have received any medical training for these tasks

Financial impact

  • Nearly half experienced major financial impact: took on debt, stopped saving, experienced food insecurity
  • Average out-of-pocket cost: $7,242/year1

Emotional and physical toll

  • 64% report high emotional stress
  • 45% report high physical strain

System-level pressure

48% of US states are on the brink of an unpaid family caregiving emergency2. The Columbia University State Caregiving Emergency Index measures state-level caregiver infrastructure against demand — and nearly half the country is at or beyond emergency threshold.

Dementia caregivers

Dementia caregivers face compounding pressures:

  • 16% depression prevalence among dementia caregivers (compared to ~7% general population)
  • $413 billion in unpaid care annually attributed to dementia caregiving (Alzheimer's Association 2025)
  • Higher rates of social isolation, sleep disruption, and financial strain than non-dementia caregivers

Why this matters for GiveCare

These numbers are not abstract. They define design decisions:

  • SMS, not an app: 1 in 5 caregivers are rural. Many are older. An app download is friction at the worst possible moment. See SMS Accessibility.
  • Proactive, not reactive: 64% are already at high emotional stress. Waiting for them to seek help means waiting too long.
  • Benefits discovery: Nearly half face major financial impact, but $60B in benefits goes unclaimed. See Benefits Discovery.
  • Zone-based tracking: The pressures span financial, physical, emotional, social, housing, and legal dimensions. One-dimensional tools miss the picture. See Zones (P1-P6).
  • Strength-framed language: Calling 63 million people "burned out" does not help them. Identifying supports and pressures gives them something to work with. See Mira.

  1. AARP/NAC. "Caregiving in the United States 2025." Source → 

  2. Columbia University. "State Caregiving Emergency Index." 2025. Source →