I Don't Know Where to Start: A First-Week Roadmap for New Caregivers of Elderly Parents
For: adult childStage: early independence15 minutesπ PrintableReviewed: 2026-06-20
I Don't Know Where to Start: A First-Week Roadmap for New Caregivers of Elderly Parents
A structured, day-by-day plan for adult children who have just recognized their parent needs help. This guide walks you through observation, assessment, safety, resource mapping, and self-care β turning overwhelm into actionable steps during your first week as a family caregiver.
By Editorial Team
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A printable version of this guide is available. Use your browser's print function (Ctrl+P / βP) to save or print.
The first week is about partnership, not crisis β starting with a conversation at the kitchen table.
The First Week: Your Roadmap from Overwhelm to Action
You've just realized your parent needs help. Maybe it was a missed bill, a fall, a refrigerator full of expired food, or a phone call that left you unsettled. The feeling is familiar to millions of adult children: a knot in your stomach and a voice saying, "I don't know where to start." You are not alone β according to a 2026 Pew Research Center survey, 10% of all U.S. adults are caregivers for a parent age 65 or older, and 68% of those caregivers regularly help with errands, housework, or home repairs.
The Institute on Aging puts it plainly: "No single roadmap exists for elder care." But that doesn't mean you have to navigate blind. This guide provides a structured, day-by-day plan for your first week β built around the COPE framework (Creativity, Optimism, Planning, Expert Information) described by HealthInAging.org. The goal is not perfection. It is assessment, safety, connection, and a foundation you can build on without burning out before you begin.
Day 1: Observe and Start the Conversation
Your first task is not to fix everything β it is to see clearly and open a dialogue. Begin with structured observation. The AARP, in an article updated March 2025 with new expert sources, identifies nine warning signs that an older adult may need help. Use these as a mental checklist during your next visit:
Change in hygiene (unwashed clothes, body odor, unkempt hair)
Change in physical appearance or mobility (weight loss, unsteady gait, difficulty rising from a chair)
Unexplained wounds or injuries (bruises, cuts, burns)
Changes in home cleanliness (clutter, spoiled food, dirty dishes piling up)
Social withdrawal (cancelled plans, not answering the phone, avoiding visitors)
Driving problems (new dents or scrapes on the car, getting lost on familiar routes)
Declining health (missed medications, difficulty managing chronic conditions, skipped doctor appointments)
Cognitive changes (forgetting names, repeating questions, not recognizing familiar people)
Once you have observed, the harder part begins: talking about it. The key is to frame the conversation as partnership, not criticism. Use "I" statements and shared concern: "I've noticed you seem more tired lately, and I worry about you. Can we talk about what might help?" Avoid accusatory language like "You're not managing" or "We need to talk about your driving." The goal of Day 1 is simply to open the door β not to solve everything.
Day 2β3: Assess Needs Using the ADL/IADL Framework
Now that you have started the conversation, it is time to get specific about what your parent can and cannot do independently. The most widely used clinical framework for this is the combination of Activities of Daily Living (ADLs) and Instrumental Activities of Daily Living (IADLs). The Cleveland Clinic, in an article last updated August 2024, defines six basic ADLs using the Katz Index and seven IADLs using the Lawton Scale.
IADLs are almost always the first tasks where people need help. Your parent may still be able to bathe and dress independently but may have stopped paying bills on time or no longer feels safe driving. Use the checklist below to assess where your parent currently stands.
ADL and IADL assessment checklist based on the Katz Index and Lawton Scale (Cleveland Clinic, 2024).
Domain
Specific Tasks
Indicates Need for Help Ifβ¦
Bathing (ADL)
Getting in/out of tub or shower, washing body
Skipping baths, visible odor, fear of water
Dressing (ADL)
Putting on clothes, fastening buttons, managing zippers
Wearing same clothes repeatedly, difficulty with fasteners
Missed doses, expired prescriptions, skipped doctor visits
Preparing Meals (IADL)
Planning, cooking, safely using kitchen appliances
Burned pots, reliance on microwave meals, no fresh food
Communicating (IADL)
Using phone, writing, understanding instructions
Unreturned calls, confusion about messages, difficulty with technology
Managing Transportation (IADL)
Driving, using public transit, arranging rides
New dents, getting lost, giving up driving voluntarily
Shopping (IADL)
Buying groceries, household supplies, personal items
Empty refrigerator, expired food, inability to carry bags
For each task, ask yourself: Can my parent do this safely and consistently without reminders or assistance? If the answer is no, that task is a candidate for support. You do not need to solve every gap this week β you just need to know where the gaps are.
ADLs (left) and IADLs (right) β the two frameworks that help you assess where your parent needs support.
Day 3β4: Conduct a Safety Sweep
With your assessment in hand, it is time to look at the physical environment. This is not a full renovation plan β it is a quick scan for immediate risks. Walk through each room with fresh eyes, focusing on three categories: fall hazards, medication safety, and emergency preparedness.
Fall Hazards
Loose rugs or mats that can slide or catch a foot
Poor lighting in hallways, stairways, and bathrooms
Clutter on floors (shoes, cords, newspapers, pet bowls)
Absence of grab bars in the shower and near the toilet
Unstable furniture used for support (wobbly tables, chairs on casters)
Medication Review
Check for expired prescriptions and over-the-counter medications
Look for missed doses or duplicate prescriptions from different doctors
Assess whether medications are organized (pillbox, blister pack) or scattered loose in drawers
Note any medications that increase fall risk (blood pressure drugs, sedatives, sleep aids)
Emergency Preparedness
Are emergency contacts visible near the phone or on the refrigerator?
Is there a working phone or mobile device within reach of the bed and favorite chair?
Are exits clear and easy to open?
Are smoke and carbon monoxide detectors working (test them)?
Day 5β6: Map Your Resources and Build Your Support Network
By now, you have a picture of what your parent needs and what the home environment looks like. The next step is to connect with the people and organizations that can help you carry the load. Caregiving is not a solo sport, and trying to do it alone is a leading cause of burnout.
Start with these key resources:
Area Agency on Aging (AAA): Your local AAA is the single most useful resource for connecting to meal programs, transportation, caregiver support groups, and in-home services. Find yours through the Eldercare Locator.
National Institute on Aging (NIA) Caregiver Handbook: The NIA offers downloadable worksheets for tracking medications, appointments, and care needs. These are practical tools you can use immediately.
Family and friends: Identify one or two people who can take on a specific, recurring task β picking up groceries once a week, handling one bill payment, or sitting with your parent for two hours on a Saturday. Be specific about what you need.
Each day of the first week is a stepping stone β not a leap. Progress, not perfection.
Day 7: Set Your Self-Care Baseline and Boundaries
The final day of your first week is about you. This is not an indulgence β it is a survival strategy. The data is stark: caregiving spouses aged 66 to 96 who experience mental or emotional strain have a 63% higher mortality risk than non-caregivers, according to a landmark 1999 study by Schulz and Beach cited by the Family Caregiver Alliance. More recently, a Guardian Life survey reported that 41% of caregivers report low overall well-being β 32% more than non-caregivers. And 40% of caregivers reduce work hours or leave jobs entirely to provide care, according to the Family Caregiver Alliance.
You cannot pour from an empty cup. Protecting your own health is not selfish β it is the single most important thing you can do to ensure your parent receives consistent, quality care over the long term.
Take three concrete actions today:
Schedule one non-negotiable personal activity for next week β a walk, a coffee with a friend, 20 minutes of reading. Put it on the calendar like a doctor's appointment.
Identify one task you can delegate. It could be as small as asking a sibling to pick up prescriptions or as large as hiring a weekly cleaner. Write down who will do it and when.
Write down one boundary. For example: "I will not handle my parent's finances alone β I will ask my sister to co-manage the accounts." Or: "I will not cancel my own doctor's appointment to drive Mom to hers." Boundaries protect both of you.
Your First-Week Checklist (Printable)
Use this checklist as a quick reference. A printable version is available for download.
Day 1: Observed using AARP's 9 warning signs and started the conversation with my parent.
Day 2β3: Completed the ADL/IADL assessment and identified the top 3 areas where help is needed.
Day 3β4: Conducted a safety sweep β identified fall hazards, reviewed medications, and checked emergency preparedness.
Day 5β6: Contacted the local Area Agency on Aging and identified 1β2 people to share specific tasks.
Day 7: Scheduled one personal activity, delegated one task, and wrote down one boundary.
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