When someone you love gets a major diagnosis — dementia, stroke, MS, brain tumor, end-of-life cancer — your life changes too. You become the case manager, the medication clerk, the safety officer, the appointment scheduler, the communicator with the rest of the family, and somewhere in there a person who still has their own life. No caregiver should have to figure all that out alone.
The Caregiver Layer is the parallel structure to the Prepared Patient Layer. Same FFH backbone — Learn It, Live It, Share It — translated for the person doing the helping rather than the person with the diagnosis. Every artifact in this layer is built around two truths: caregiving is a skill that can be learned, and the caregiver is a patient too.
The four phases of caregiving — from "we just got the call" to end of life — give you a map so the next surprise doesn't blindside you.
Safe transfers, medication management, fall prevention, dementia communication. The Skills Lab is short, practical, and video-ready.
Caregiver burden is real and it's measurable. Respite is medicine. The platform tracks the caregiver's wellness, not just the loved one's.
Anyone whose hours, sleep, money, and attention are now being spent helping someone else navigate a major health condition. You may not call yourself a caregiver yet. The role usually shows up before the word does.
Adult child, sibling, parent of an adult child with a serious diagnosis.
The person who shares the home and now shares the medical calendar.
The person who shows up because no one else is in the picture.
Home health aide, CNA, hired companion who needs the same skills, just from a different starting point.
Caregiving is not one job. It's four jobs in sequence — and each one needs different skills, different supports, and different self-care. Knowing which phase you're in helps you pick the right artifact.
First 30 days · The shock and the scramble
You just got the call. Permission to feel scared. The first 24 hours: don't make big decisions; do gather information; do call one trusted person. Set up the binder. Get the diagnosis in writing. Build the team. The First 30 Days caregiver course walks day-by-day.
Open First 30 Days course →Months 2–24 · The new normal you build
Medication routines, monitoring, escalations, in-and-out of appointments, comorbidity awareness. Skills Lab artifacts (safe transfers, meds, falls, communication) are most actively used here. You learn what calls a clinician versus what calls 911.
Open the Skills Lab catalog →Years · The chronic plateau (or slow decline)
The condition is what it is. Routines hold. Caregiver burden becomes the bigger threat than any single medical event. Respite is medicine. Legal and financial planning matters: durable power of attorney, advance directives, Medicaid waiver awareness, employer FMLA conversations.
Long-Arc Planning module →Final months/weeks · Comfort, hospice, legacy
Comfort care, hospice, what dying with this disease looks like, advance care planning (POLST/MOLST, code status), grief that starts before death (anticipatory grief), legacy projects, and the peer-mentor track for caregivers post-loss. Cross-references the patient-layer end-of-life modules where they exist.
Late-Stage & Legacy module →Caregiver courses pair with the patient-layer courses. The patient course is written for the person living with the diagnosis; the caregiver course is written for you. Each card links both.
The highest-acuity caregiver scenario. Communication, safety, BPSD (behavioral & psychological symptoms of dementia), wandering prevention, when to escalate, and the long arc into hospice. Cross-references the unified vascular cognitive cluster.
First weeks home from the stroke unit, rehab milestones, recognizing recurrent stroke and TIA, aphasia communication, hemiplegia transfers, and the long-arc rehabilitation plateau. Pairs with the patient-layer Stroke and TIA courses.
The relapsing-remitting unpredictability — what to do during a flare, fatigue management, cognitive support, partner intimacy and role shifts, and the long-arc transition to assistive devices.
Active treatment caregiving (chemo cycles, neutropenic precautions, port care, side-effect tracking) and the survivorship arc. Pairs with patient-layer survivor courses (breast, colorectal, prostate to date).
From diagnosis through surgery, radiation, recovery, and (for high-grade tumors) the late-stage trajectory. Cognitive change, seizure preparedness, and the family communication arc.
A condition-agnostic course for the final months and weeks. Comfort care, hospice mechanics, what dying looks like, advance care planning, anticipatory grief, and what to do in the days after.
Condition-agnostic chronological onboarding for the family member who just got the diagnostic call. Day-by-day for the first month — what to do, what not to do, and what to start setting up for the long arc.
Practical, hands-on, video-friendly modules. Each Skills Lab artifact follows the same four-phase pattern: Why This Matters → The Skill → Practice → Mastery. Institutions can drop training videos into the embedded placeholder blocks.
Sit-to-stand, bed-to-chair pivot, gait belts, wheelchair-to-bed, and what to do if your loved one falls. Protects your back AND them.
Validate emotion, don't quiz, redirect rather than correct. Worked dialogues for wandering, paranoia, sundowning, refusal, hallucinations.
Medication reconciliation, pillbox setup, the Five Rights, anticholinergic burden, dangerous interactions, missed-dose protocols.
Home walk-through checklist, top-10 modifications by ROI, routine adjustments, and the after-fall protocol. Cross-links to RRPS Certification.
Dignity-first hygiene, shower-vs-bath decision, incontinence care, skin checks, and the conversations that ease the embarrassment.
Pressure-injury prevention, dressing changes, when to escalate, infection signs, and how to advocate for a wound-care consult.
The DICE framework in caregiver hands. Recognizing trigger patterns, environmental fixes, when to call the memory clinic, when emergency.
The hardest conversation in the dementia (and stroke, and MS) caregiver journey. Scripts, alternatives, DMV reporting, key removal.
State variation, eligibility basics, what waivers actually cover (HCBS, PACE, others), how to apply, what to do when denied.
The parallel to the patient-side Ambassador → Workforce ladder. Caregiving doesn't have to end when the loved one's care ends — for many, it's the on-ramp to a clinical career. Future builds will integrate this with the FFH Pathway Engine and Pathway Prescriber.
You discover the layer exists. You browse the hub. You don't yet identify as a caregiver.
You complete First 30 Days plus one condition course. You've earned the role's basic skills.
You've completed multiple condition courses, all four core Skills Labs, and one peer-mentor cycle.
You take the formal certification. FFH credit cross-walks toward CNA and Home Health Aide programs.
The Pathway Engine routes you toward Banner LPN/RN bridge programs, with prior caregiving hours documented.
Caregiver burden is real, measurable, and predictive of bad outcomes for both the caregiver and the loved one. About 60% of family caregivers report clinically significant stress; depression rates run 30–50% higher than non-caregiving peers; mortality risk is elevated for spousal caregivers under high strain (Schulz & Beach, JAMA 1999, replicated since).
The Zarit Burden Interview is the standard screening tool. The platform offers a self-administered version inside every caregiver course. Respite is medicine — not a luxury, not a guilt trip, an evidence-based intervention. Plan it the way you plan a medication.
The caregiver layer lives alongside the patient layer, not on top of it. When your loved one is ready to learn their own material, point them at these patient-facing entry points.
The full patient-layer hub — 50+ condition journeys, 10 SHELL deep courses, Force Field Fact Sheets, RRPS Certification, the Ambassador track.
The patient's first read — what it means to be a Prepared Patient, the journey to Ambassador, what comes in the box.
For your loved one's clinicians — how to use these materials in office, ER, and discharge teaching.
The patient-side counterpart to the caregiver Dementia course. Useful in early-stage dementia when the loved one can still learn alongside you.
Pair with future caregiver Stroke Recovery course. Shared comorbidity-cluster framing.
Pair with future caregiver MS course. Strong partner-intimacy and role-shift content.