Lawmakers Must Step Up for Caregivers

That nearly one in four people in Hawai‘i is or recently was a family caregiver comes as no surprise to Judith Wong.

The Honolulu resident is caring for her husband, who was diagnosed with a degenerative muscular disease in 2016.

“His disease is very long-term,” she said. “It will not kill him. It will disable him. So I have concerns about whether we will have adequate resources to carry us all the way through without putting us in a financial bind.”

The “Caregiving in the U.S. 2025: Caring Across States” report confirms what we’ve long known: Family caregivers, numbering about 260,000 in Hawai‘i, need our support.

Family caregivers like Judith provide more than $2.6 billion in unpaid care each year in Hawai‘i, helping adult family members remain at home—where they want to be. They help with bathing, cooking, managing medications, driving to the supermarket/doctor appointments and handling medical tasks, sometimes with little or no caregiver training.

Being a caregiver is hard, demanding work. It takes a toll on your finances, on your body and on your mental health.

Caregivers who work must balance the needs of their jobs with the needs of their loved one. About 80% of caregivers pay out of their own pocket for caregiving expenses, an average of about $7,200 a year. Many reduce work hours or quit working, further straining finances. About half report taking on debt and draining savings. AARP Hawai‘i is fighting to provide greater support to family caregivers through state and federal tax credits, paid family leave and incentives to ease the workforce shortage of paid caregivers. AARP Hawai‘i offers free caregiving tools and resources at aarp.org/caregiving.

AARP Hawai‘i also created a nationwide movement to empower family caregivers. Called “I Am A Caregiver,” it asks caregivers—and people who support caregivers—to raise their hands and show lawmakers that they can’t continue to ignore the needs of people who care for others.

Join AARP Hawai‘i at aarp.org/iamacaregiver or share your caregiving story with us via email at hiaarp@aarp.org.


AARP HAWAI‘I (nonprofit)
1001 Bishop St., Ste. 625, Honolulu, HI 96813
866-295-7282 | hiaarp@aarp.org
aarp.org/hi | facebook.com/aarphawaii

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