RESOURCES FOR CAREGIVERS
JOIN OUR NEWSLETTER
Receive custom tools to help you manage your condition and get the latest in bladder and bowel health from NAFC!
RESOURCE CENTER FOR CAREGIVERS
Whether you are a professional caregiver or a family caregiver, taking care of someone with incontinence is a demanding job. From the physical tasks to the psychological nurturing, you will be pushed and pulled in a lot of different directions. Yet, your service is invaluable. Taking care of another person shows strength, compassion, and tremendous amounts of character. At the National Association for Continence, we recognize that you are presented with tests each day. This section has been created to provide information about products that caregivers might find helpful in the care of a loved one with bladder or bowel control problems.
We’ve assembled a number of articles and resources to help guide the home caregiver. Whether you’ve just begun caring for a loved one with incontinence or have been at it for a while now, these articles can help dispel some of the myths of incontinence and also provide you with some new tips. Click on any of the boxes below for more information, and don’t forget to check out our blog’s articles on caregiving – click here to search our entire blog for even more helpful information.
RELATED ARTICLES

Will Medicare Or Medicaid Cover Incontinence Products?
Updated: 8/5/2022 This post is also a podcast! Click below to listen, and check out all our podcast episodes by clicking here! If you’re incontinent,

7 Tell-Tale Signs You Have A Bladder Infection
If you’ve suffered from bladder infections in the past, you likely know the symptoms when you spot them. After all, a UTI is an unpleasant

What I’ve Learned About IBS And How To Treat It.
I was fairly young when I first started having bowel trouble. A consistently nervous young woman, I was constantly in a state of worry –

Caring For An Incontinent Loved One Over the Holidays
The holidays are meant to be joyous and filled with opportunities to create long-lasting memories. However, for the person caring for someone with incontinence, it