Caregiver Stressors | Six Must Be Addressed | SPICED!

Caregiver Stressors cannot only diminish a person’s ability to provide care, but can also cause the caregiver to need care!

This is an image of a person depicting stress and frustration that with rays of blue and red energy coming from the top of their head.

It is important to understand that every caregiver is equally as important as any other person involved in a situation. That is true whether they have agreed to (or been coerced into) providing services to someone else in need.

Let’s look at Six Caregiver Stressors that need to be “top of mind” for both caregivers and others.


The Six Caregiver Stressors ~ Load Categories

Using the Acronym = “SPICED.”

Spiritual Load (Poses Existential Questions)
Physical Load (Body-Based Tasks)
Identity Load (Sense of Responsibility)
Cognitive Load (Mental Management)
Emotional Load (Regulation and Containment)
Decision Load (Constant Macro and Micro-Decisions)

Six Caregiver Stressors

Spiritual (Existential Questions Arise

for Patients, Families, and  Caregivers)

  • Questioning purpose and fairness.
  • Feeling distant from faith or spiritual comfort.
  • Wrestling with hope versus acceptance.
  • Carrying spiritual guilt or responsibility.
  • Facing mortality and impermanence.

Physical Load (Body-Based Tasks)

These require direct physical effort.

  • Transfers and mobility assistance.
  • Personal hygiene support.
  • Cooking and cleaning.
  • Managing household logistics.
  • Transporting patients to appointments

Risk: Physical exhaustion reduces safety margins quickly.

Goal: Identify which physical tasks could be shared, simplified, or automated.


Cognitive Load (Mental Management)

Invisible but extremely draining.

Examples:

  • Tracking appointments.
  • Medication management – which includes remembering ever-changing medical instructions, dosage, and frequencies + things they cannot be mixed with.
  • Financial management across multiple accounts for multiple people.
  • Coordinating contractors and services.

Key insight: Mental tracking consumes enormous energy even when sitting still.

Goal: Externalize memory into systems (binders, checklists, automation).


Emotional Load (Regulation and Containment)

This often is the heaviest unseen burden.

Examples:

  • Soothing anxiety.
  • Preventing conflicts.
  • Anticipating emotional reactions.
  • Holding responsibility for everyone’s well-being.

Risk: Emotional fatigue leads to decision fatigue and burnout.

Goal: Shift from emotional responsiveness to structured routines where possible.


Decision Load (Constant Micro-Decisions)

Caregivers make hundreds of decisions daily.

Examples:

  • What to cook. Do different people have different requirements?
  • When to intervene.
  • Whether symptoms require action.
  • How to prioritize conflicting needs.
  • When is helping really enabling someone to be dependent when they do not need to be?

Professional caregiving insight: Decision fatigue often feels like physical exhaustion.

Goal: Create default routines that eliminate unnecessary decisions.


Identity Load (Sense of Responsibility)

Deep internal belief: “If I don’t do this, everything fails.” This is not just emotional: it is existential.

Goal: Move responsibility into systems so identity is not fused with constant action.


Which Category of Caregiver Stressors

is Heaviest and Hardest

on Caregivers’ Mental & Physical Health?

Most families assume physical load is the issue, but emotional, cognitive, and decision loads are often larger.


Quick Caregiver Stressors: Structural Adjustments

That Relieve Load Immediately

Reduce Spiritual Load:

  • Meditation
  • Talking with friends, family, counselors, and spiritual advisors
  • Physical exercise – gentle and with concentration on breathing, as well as movement
  • Silence
  • Soothing music

Reduce Physical Load:

  • Prepared meals.
  • Grocery delivery.
  • Simplified clothing systems.

Reduce Cognitive Load:

  • Posted daily schedule.
  • Medication automation.
  • Shared calendar.

Reduce Decision Load:

  • Fixed weekly meal rotation.
  • Standardized daily routine phrases.

Reduce Emotional Load:

  • Predictable communication protocol.
  • Written expectations.

 Caregiver Stressors – Research about the Need for Self-Care for Caregivers

Here are three solid, research-grounded links you can include to support the importance of caregiver self-care:

These three together support both the need for caregiver self-care and the effectiveness of self-care interventions.magazine.medlineplus+2


We’ll Explore Caregiver Stressors More in the Near Future

I want to talk about each topic in some depth, so this is just an overview. Feel free to email me at shansapp2@gmail with your questions and ideas that you would like me to write about in the upcoming blogs. If you want to learn more about my Signature Designs for tablescapes and other things you can do to beautify your surroundings and uplift your spirits, click here.


Note re AI: The concepts in this blog are mine, but some of the content was enhanced by my use of Perplexity AI for research.

DISCLAIMER:  I am not an expert in the field of nutrition, nor am I certified in any medical capacity. I am simply sharing research that I’ve gathered from reliable sources, so that we all may learn and begin our own investigations. Neither I nor this website makes any claims about prevention, diagnosis, treatment, or cure for physical, emotional, mental, or spiritual illnesses or symptoms. This content is for informational and educational purposes and does not provide individual medical advice. Contact your health provider about your situation.


From My Heart to Yours ~ Practical Wisdom for Every Caregiver

Signature Designs by SAS logo slide for reducing caregiver stressors

 

Shannon Sapp: FBC & Signature Designs by SAS
Author: Shannon Sapp: FBC & Signature Designs by SAS

Shannon is a seasoned, Master Caregiver, who had to learn on the job, as she helped her husband through through death-defying moments, hours, days, months, and years. Simulaneously, she cares for two other people with life-threatening issues, and she does this 24/7/365! She's often asked, "How do you DO that?" and has decided to share her ideas to help other patients, caregivers, their families, and supporters. Now, she and her husband are leaders in advocacy for cancer research and in teaching both patients and caregivers healthier ways of living. She also designs interior decor and tablescapes under Signature Designs by SAS.

About Shannon Sapp: FBC & Signature Designs by SAS

Shannon is a seasoned, Master Caregiver, who had to learn on the job, as she helped her husband through through death-defying moments, hours, days, months, and years. Simulaneously, she cares for two other people with life-threatening issues, and she does this 24/7/365! She's often asked, "How do you DO that?" and has decided to share her ideas to help other patients, caregivers, their families, and supporters. Now, she and her husband are leaders in advocacy for cancer research and in teaching both patients and caregivers healthier ways of living. She also designs interior decor and tablescapes under Signature Designs by SAS.

Comments are closed.