Caring Together
Aaron McGinley
Sachbuch / Angewandte Psychologie
Beschreibung
Balancing caregiving, medical responsibilities, and family life can feel overwhelming-especially when parenting a child with complex health needs. Caring Together: A Workbook for Couples, Co-Parents, and Caregivers Managing the Health Care of a Child with Cancer or Other Serious Illness is a practical, empowering workbook designed to help parents and caregivers organize healthcare tasks, streamline communication, and strengthen their partnership, all while prioritizing what matters most: their child's well-being and their family's resilience.
This workbook adapts proven strategies to the unique challenges of families navigating medical complexity. Through easy-to-use worksheets, guided discussions, and fill-in-the-blank planning tools, parents and caregivers can:
- Clarify roles and responsibilities in caregiving and household management
- Improve communication and reduce conflict under stress
- Develop personalized care plans for medical appointments, emergencies, and daily routines
- Foster teamwork while protecting emotional well-being for the whole family
Whether you're a parent, caregiver, or support person, this workbook offers a structured path to reduce burnout, strengthen partnerships, and bring more balance into your life-without sacrificing the care your child needs.
Perfect for: Parents, caregivers, social workers, counselors, and anyone supporting families of children with complex medical needs.
Keywords for Metadata: medically complex children, caregiver workbook, parenting special needs, family organization, healthcare planning, caregiver support, Fair Play for families, parent communication, family resilience, managing medical care
Category: Family & Relationships / Parenting / Special Needs
Audience: Parents, caregivers, healthcare professionals, and counselors
Empower your family. Reduce the overwhelm. Build a caregiving system that works for everyone.
Kundenbewertungen
caregiving, co-parenting, couples, pediatric cancer, medical social work, rare disease, parenting, cancer