Disrupting Elder Care: We Need To Talk More About Working Daughters

Episode 468 | Host: Emilie Aries | Guest: Liz O’Donnell

How do you balance caring for your aging parents and your career without burning out?

We organize so much in our lives. We plan our workdays, our meals, our weekends. Many of us even plan how and when we might introduce children into our busy lives. Incorporating the care of our aging parents or other loved ones, however, is not something we can choose to weave into our lives when it’s convenient. When a mother receives a terminal diagnosis, a father’s memory loss intensifies, an in-law loses their driver’s license—these unfortunate events often happen without warning, and suddenly, you might be in the thick of leveling up your career, staying on top of your daily obligations, and maybe even raising young children when you’re thrust into the additional role of caregiver for the elderly.

This is what happened to Liz O’Donnell, and after more than a decade in the field, she is a recognized expert on working while caregiving. In 2015, she launched Working Daughter to address an area she identified as woefully underserved. The organization supports women balancing elder care on top of their careers and all the other demands of adult life. In this episode, Liz shares her expertise and some of the discoveries outlined in her 2019 book, Working Daughter: A Guide to Care for Your Aging Parents While Making a Living.

How does society support working daughters?

The short answer is, it doesn’t. 

Ten thousand Americans turn 65 every day. Is it any wonder, then, that more adults in the midst of their working years are facing caring for their aging parents while they also juggle full-time jobs, social and community demands, and, in many cases, child care? Given this influx of  ”sandwich generation” workers burning the candle at both ends, there should be as much corporate and governmental support out there as there is for childcare, right?

We know that even childcare support is hugely lacking in this country, so maybe it’s not surprising that policies around elder care have been painfully slow to come to fruition. Liz acknowledges that the pandemic shed some light on these issues (due in part to the influx of people becoming and remaining sick with COVID), but it’s still far from sufficient. 

Support for full- and part-time family caregivers is all over the map, she explains. Some states reimburse caregivers through Medicaid, and there are a few tax credits in action and in the works, but things differ wildly on a state-by-state basis. In the corporate world, private companies are beginning to add this layer into their benefits, but it’s simply happening too gradually for the number of people this issue is affecting.

Flexibility at work goes a long way

Part of Liz’s work includes consulting with corporations on developing elder care benefits packages, and flexibility is the first thing she recommends. During the pandemic, many of us learned the value of more flexible schedules as we settled into remote work. For one thing, the difference between being able to take a few hours off to run a parent to an appointment (and wait longer than expected, and then pick up their prescription or take them to the lab for bloodwork) or having to take the full day can have an enormous impact on what work gets done.

As with childcare and general life responsibilities, elder care would benefit enormously from a wholesale shift to outcome-oriented management. Liz notes that while what she gets done between 9 and 5 on a workday might horrify a traditional boss, what she achieves between 7 am and 9 pm is nothing short of incredible. An enormous strain would be lifted from people caring for their aging parents if more companies adopted the mindset that results matter more than butts in seats and face time in the office.

A safe place to talk about it

In addition to more flexible work options, the change Liz would most like to see in the area of elder care and working daughters is more talking about it. “It is a profound experience to care for somebody at that stage of their life, when they are in such a vulnerable place. But where do you talk about that?” Recognizing and having the space to process this massive identity shift can go a long way toward helping parental caregivers feel like they have a choice in the matter—and this sense of agency leads to a much better experience, however difficult the role.

Working Daughters offers just such a place to talk about what this group is going through. The website is packed with resources on what to expect and how to navigate this massive life transition, including a Working Daughters Bill of Rights that validates your right to keep living your life guilt-free while taking on this massive new role. Liz also runs a private Facebook community with almost 10,000 members, which offers a safe space to vent, ask advice, and feel less alone in what can be a very isolating endeavor. Members of the organization can also book time with Liz, during which she offers everything from an empathetic ear to literally waiting on hold for a service the client’s parent requires.

What can you do now to prepare?

In our conversation, Liz offers so much guidance around how working daughters can think about and act on the situations they’re facing. One way to mitigate the overwhelming blow of suddenly needing to care for an aging parent is to get a jump on the groundwork before the worst happens. Here are a few things you can start doing or thinking about right now:

  • Earn where you can, when you can. If parental care is a likely facet of your future, now is the time to push on the pursuit of your career goals and shore up your financial position as much as you can.

  • Figure out where the support systems are for when you need them. Who will pick up the kids from school if you have an elder care emergency? 

  • Work with your parents to ensure you have all the information you might need one day, including financial, medical, and housing information, so you can step in and manage these specifics if or when the time comes. Of course, some loved ones will be more open to these discussions than others, but broaching the subject now will help you see where you stand and what other details you need to collect.

Liz covers such a vast array of information and advice in this episode. Whether you’re in the midst of elder care now, can foresee it happening in the future, or want to support a friend or family member who has taken on this heavy mantle, listen to our conversation to benefit fully from Liz’s expertise.

How has caring for an aging loved one impacted your career, or what concerns do you have about this pending responsibility? Visit the Courage Community on Facebook or join us in our group on LinkedIn to share your thoughts and experiences.

Related links from today’s episode:

Connect with Liz on LinkedIn

Find resources on Working Daughter.com

Implement the Caregiving Basics

Order “Working Daughter: A Guide to Care for Your Aging Parents While Making a Living”

U.S. Department of Labor, “Older Women and Unpaid Caregiving in the U.S.”

Deloitte “Women @ Work 2024” Study

“The Crisis Facing America's Working Daughters” by Liz O’Donnell 

The Wall Street Journal, “When Caring for Your Parents Comes at a Cost to Your Career”

The Working Daughter Bill of Rights

Episode 466, How Gen X Navigates Career Change

McKinsey & Co. Women in the Workplace Report

Level Up: a Leadership Accelerator for Women on the Rise

Bossed Up Courage Community

Bossed Up LinkedIn Group

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