Stroke recovery caregiver support · First 90 days

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0M

Family caregivers in the US

Most with no formal training

0%

Feel unprepared at discharge

Per AARP 2024 survey

0.0hrs

Average daily caregiving time, week 1

Often while managing their own job

0%

Report significant emotional distress

In the first 90 days

Phase 1 — Days 1–7

The first week home is the hardest. Nothing about that is your fault.

Hospital discharge planners have 20 minutes to hand you a folder that took nurses years to learn. Here's what actually matters in the first seven days.

  • Set up a single medication log — one notebook, one pen, by the bed

    Photograph every prescription label on day one

  • Learn one safe transfer technique, practiced twice before you need it

    Ask the discharge PT to demonstrate — record it on your phone

  • Identify your 2am resource: a nurse hotline, a trusted neighbor

    Most hospitals offer a 24-hour discharge nurse line — call and save the number

  • Schedule the first follow-up appointment before you leave the hospital

    Neurology within 2 weeks, primary care within 1 week is standard

  • Tell one person what you need — not just that things are hard

    Specific asks get answered: 'Can you bring dinner Tuesday?' works

"You learned to do hard things before. You'll learn this too."

Soft morning light through sheer curtains in a quiet recovery room, hospital bed visible in background

Phase 2 — Weeks 2–4

A routine doesn't mean control. It means one less decision at 6am.

Caregiving improvisation is exhausting. A gentle structure — not a rigid schedule — turns three daily crises into one predictable flow.

  • Block the same 30 minutes each evening to review tomorrow's medications

    Use a pill organizer sorted every Sunday — it takes 10 minutes, saves hours

  • Write down every therapy appointment for the next 3 weeks

    Create a shared calendar — even a paper one on the fridge — for family visibility

  • Identify two tasks you can hand off without explaining yourself

    Grocery pickup, pharmacy runs, and lawn care are common starting points

  • Build a 15-minute wind-down for yourself after the last care task

    You cannot pour from an empty cup — this is medical advice, not self-help

  • Create a simple one-page 'care summary' for substitute caregivers

    Medications, allergies, preferences, emergency contacts — one page, large print

"Predictability is kindness — for both of you."

Warm morning kitchen scene with soft light, notebook and coffee cup on table suggesting gentle morning routine

Phase 3 — Weeks 3–8

You will feel angry. You will feel grief. Both are normal. Neither makes you a bad caregiver.

Caregiver burnout isn't weakness — it's what happens when a person is asked to do the work of a small medical team, alone, without sleep. Here's how to recognize it before it breaks you.

  • Name what you're feeling — not just 'tired'

    Anger, grief, loneliness, resentment, love — all of these can be true at once

  • Talk to your own doctor. Tell them you're a caregiver.

    Depression and anxiety rates in caregivers are 2–3x the general population

  • Find one other caregiver to speak with — not to vent, but to not be alone

    Stroke caregiver support groups exist in most cities and on every platform

  • Acknowledge that loving someone and needing a break from them are not opposites

    Respite care is a medical necessity, not a luxury or an admission of failure

  • Write down one thing that was hard today. Then one thing that wasn't.

    This is not toxic positivity — it's training your nervous system to see both

"The grief of watching someone change is real. You're allowed to mourn and love at the same time."

Two people sitting together quietly in warm afternoon light, one with a hand resting gently on the other's shoulder

From caregivers like you

You're not the first to feel this way.
You won't be the last.

"The first night home, I didn't know how to move him from the wheelchair to the bed. I was terrified I'd hurt him. Steady walked me through it step by step at midnight."

MT

Margaret T.

Wife, caring for husband after ischemic stroke

"I'm a retired engineer. I'm used to solving problems. But the insurance appeals were a different language entirely. Having someone explain it plainly changed everything."

DK

David K.

Son, caring for father, 6 weeks post-discharge

"Nobody told me I was allowed to feel angry. Steady was the first resource that said it plainly — and then gave me something to do with that anger."

PS

Priya S.

Daughter, caring for mother after hemorrhagic stroke

Phase 4 — Ongoing

Insurance paperwork is not a test of your love. It's a system designed to be confusing.

Most families leave thousands in therapy coverage on the table because no one explained the appeals process in plain English. Here's the plain English version.

  • Request an Explanation of Benefits (EOB) after every claim — read it

    Every denial has a reason code — that code is the start of your appeal

  • Speech, occupational, and physical therapy are often under-authorized — appeal the first denial

    Over 60% of first-time denials are reversed on appeal with documentation

  • Ask the therapy office for a 'letter of medical necessity' — they write them routinely

    This letter, attached to your appeal, dramatically increases approval rates

  • Contact your state's insurance commissioner if appeals are ignored

    Most states mandate a response within 30 days — the commissioner enforces this

  • Keep a paper trail: date, name, what was said, confirmation number

    One organized folder prevents hours of re-explaining to every new representative

"You are your loved one's best advocate. We'll teach you exactly what to say."

Person sitting at desk with organized paperwork and soft lamp light, looking calm and focused

You don't have to figure this out alone

Find your support plan.
In five quiet questions.

No forms to fax. No insurance hoops. Just an honest conversation about where you are and what you need next — and a care navigator who speaks plainly.

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