Behind many journeys through illness, disability, or mental health difficulty is someone quietly providing care, advocacy, reassurance, and emotional support. During Carers Week, we want to recognise and celebrate the enormous contribution carers make every day — often with compassion, resilience, and dedication that can go unseen.
At Bloomfield Health, we also recognise an important truth: caring for someone else can have a significant impact on your own mental health and wellbeing.
Whether you are supporting a partner with depression, a child with neurodevelopmental needs, an ageing parent with dementia, or a loved one recovering from physical illness, caring can be emotionally demanding. Many carers balance practical responsibilities, financial pressures, work commitments, and family life while trying to support another person through distress or uncertainty.
Carers deserve support too.
The Emotional Impact of Caring
Caring for someone else can be deeply meaningful and rewarding. Many carers describe a strong sense of purpose, love, and connection in their role. However, caring can also bring emotional strain — particularly when support systems are limited or when the person being cared for has complex needs.
Research consistently shows that carers are at increased risk of:
This is especially true when caring roles become long-term, unpredictable, or emotionally intense.
For carers supporting someone with mental illness, additional challenges may include managing crises, coping with uncertainty, navigating fragmented services, or feeling responsible for another person’s safety and wellbeing. Carers may also experience stigma or feel that their own needs are overlooked.
Importantly, carers often minimise their own distress because they feel they “must keep going” for the person they support.
Mental Health Difficulties Affect the Whole Family System
Mental and physical health conditions rarely affect only one individual. Families, partners, and close supporters are often deeply impacted too.
For example:
Many carers also struggle with difficult questions:
These experiences are common — and understandable.
Why Carer Support Matters
Supporting carers is not only compassionate; it is clinically important.
When carers receive appropriate emotional and practical support, this can improve:
Carers often benefit from having a confidential space focused entirely on their own experiences, emotions, and needs — rather than only the needs of the person they support.
Seeking support is not selfish. It is often an essential part of sustaining care safely and compassionately over time.
Bloomfield Health’s Carer Support Interventions
At Bloomfield Health, we offer dedicated Carer Support Interventions designed to support people caring for loved ones with mental or physical health difficulties.
Our approach is compassionate, trauma-informed, and tailored to the realities of caring roles.
Support may include:
Interventions can be short-term or ongoing and are available online or in person.
Support may be provided by therapists, psychologists, psychiatrists, or other appropriate professionals depending on individual needs.
Caring Without Losing Yourself
One of the most difficult aspects of caring can be maintaining your own sense of identity and wellbeing alongside the caring role.
Carers sometimes feel unable to prioritise rest, social connection, hobbies, or emotional support because their focus is constantly on another person’s needs. Over time, this can lead to emotional depletion.
Part of healthy caring involves recognising that your wellbeing matters too.
Small but meaningful steps may include:
Caring sustainably is not about perfection. It is about balancing compassion for others with compassion for yourself.
Recognising and Valuing Carers
Carers are often the hidden foundation of healthcare and recovery. Many provide extraordinary levels of support quietly and without recognition.
This Carers Week, we want to acknowledge the emotional labour, commitment, and resilience carers show every day.
If you are supporting someone else and struggling with stress, overwhelm, or burnout, you do not have to manage alone.
Learn More About Carer Support at Bloomfield Health
Bloomfield Health offers specialist support for carers through our dedicated Carer Support Interventions service.