Almost 6 million people in the US care for an ill or disabled partner
If you are caring for a spouse or partner with a chronic illness or disability, you already know that this is unlike any other caregiving role.
Nearly 6 million Americans are in your situation. And most of them are carrying more than anyone around them realizes.
Spousal caregivers spend more hours caregiving each week, take on more complex and demanding tasks, and receive less outside help than any other category of family caregiver. When a partner becomes seriously ill or disabled, the financial impact is immediate and compounding — often both partners lose income at the same time that medical costs rise. Decisions about children, careers, housing, and retirement are reshaped entirely. There are few areas of life that chronic illness leaves untouched.
But the hardest part is rarely the logistics.
It is the loss of the relationship itself. The partner who was your confidant, your companion, your equal in everything — is now the person you are responsible for caring for. That shift changes a marriage in ways that are profound, ongoing, and almost impossible to explain to someone who hasn't lived it.
This is why Well Spouse Association exists. We provide support and community to people of all ages who are caring for a spouse or partner with chronic illness or disability — whether you think of yourself as a caregiver or not. We are an inclusive and welcoming organization regardless of age, partnership arrangement, sexuality, orientation, gender, or religious beliefs.
You do not have to carry this alone. That is not just something we say. It is why we have been here since 1988.