When Support Needs Change
Support needs often change gradually, through small shifts in daily life that can be easy to miss at first. The following guides help families understand common care transitions and the kinds of support that may be helpful at different points along the journey.
They are not assessments or recommendations. They are simply a place to begin, helping families make sense of changing needs and navigate care options with greater understanding and confidence.

When Independence Starts to Shift
For many families, this is where the journey first begins.
A parent or partner may still be living independently, but daily life no longer feels as manageable as it once did. Tasks take more time. Routines require more effort. Small challenges begin to pile up, even if everything appears mostly fine on the surface.
This stage is often less about crisis and more about sustainability, whether daily life can continue safely and comfortably without placing growing strain on the person themselves or those supporting them.
These early shifts are not always dramatic. More often, they show up as patterns. Looking closely at those patterns can help families decide whether additional support may be needed.
The information below outlines common shifts families begin to notice as independence becomes harder to sustain.

When Memory and Judgement Affect Daily Life
For many families, this stage brings a different kind of uncertainty.
Changes may have started subtly — repeated questions, missed appointments, increasing reliance on reminders. Over time, those moments may begin to affect daily routines, safety, or decision-making in more noticeable ways.
In the early stages, changes are not always tied to a diagnosis or a single defining event. Instead, they often appear gradually, through small but meaningful shifts in memory, judgment, or awareness that begin to affect how daily life functions.
Families may notice repeated questions, increased confusion, difficulty managing medications or appointments, or growing reliance on others to stay organized. Over time, these changes can move beyond inconvenience and begin to influence safety, decision-making, and overall well-being.
At this point, informal observations alone may no longer feel sufficient. Gaining a clearer understanding of what is changing can help families determine whether additional structure, supervision, or support would improve safety and quality of life.

When Medical and Physical Care Needs Increase
For many families, this stage feels less subtle than earlier transitions. Health changes may be ongoing or may follow an illness, injury, or hospitalization. Recovery takes longer. Physical tasks require more assistance. Medical needs become more complex or harder to manage consistently in their current living situation.
At this stage, the question is often no longer whether support is needed, but whether the current environment can safely and reliably provide the level of care required day to day.
These changes are not always sudden. They may build gradually through increasing physical limitations, chronic conditions, or the accumulation of medical needs that require regular monitoring, skilled care, or hands-on assistance.
This guide is meant to help families reflect on how medical and physical care needs may be changing, and how those changes can influence what kind of care support is required moving forward.

When Comfort Becomes the Priority
For many families, this stage arrives quietly.
There may not be a clear turning point or a single decision that brings it into focus. Instead, it often emerges through lived experience — longer recoveries, increasing fatigue, or a sense that medical treatments no longer bring the relief or stability they once did.
Daily life may begin to narrow. Energy becomes more limited. What once felt manageable starts to feel exhausting, both for the person receiving care and for those supporting them.
At this point, families often notice that the question has changed.
It is no longer about doing more, but about doing what matters most.
Comfort, relief, and dignity begin to take precedence. So does the desire for care that feels steady, responsive, and aligned with the person’s values and wishes..
This guide is meant to support families as they recognize this shift and begin to think about what comfort-focused care can look like, and what to look for as they explore hospice or palliative supports.