A senior woman in an armchair at home with her caretaker nearby — the scene of round-the-clock home care.

Care Guide

Fairfax Family Caregiver Resources for Round-the-Clock Support

"Resources for Fairfax family caregivers managing round-the-clock home care — emotional support, financial help, respite, and burnout prevention."

Sarah Mitchell, RN, BSN

24/7 Care Coordinator

Reviewed by Carol Bradley Bursack, NCCDP-certified — Owner of Minding Our Elders

2 min read

·

Updated May 13, 2026

Family caregivers of Fairfax-area seniors needing 24-hour care face the highest burnout risk in family caregiving — emotional, physical, and financial strain compounds when care never stops. Fairfax has stronger family caregiver resources than most realize: support groups, respite programs, financial counseling, mental health support, and burnout-prevention coaching.

This guide maps the local resources for Fairfax families managing round-the-clock care.

Emotional support for Fairfax round-the-clock caregivers

Resources:

  • Alzheimer’s Association 24/7 Helpline: 1-800-272-3900 (coaches available now, dementia-focused)
  • Family Caregiver Alliance support: caregiver.org
  • the Fairfax Area Agency on Aging caregiver support coordinator
  • 988 Suicide and Crisis Lifeline (immediate crisis support)
  • Online caregiver support communities (Memory People, Caring.com)

Respite for 24-hour caregivers in Fairfax

Respite for round-the-clock caregivers looks different than for partial-day caregivers. Options:

  • VA respite through the Washington DC VA Medical Center (up to 30 days/year for eligible veterans)
  • the Fairfax Area Agency on Aging National Family Caregiver Support Program (limited free hours)
  • Virginia’s Commonwealth Coordinated Care Plus (CCC Plus) waiver respite for income-eligible
  • Alzheimer’s Association respite scholarships
  • Short residential respite at Fairfax-area assisted living or memory care
  • Layered scheduling: family-paid relief shift while 24-hour caregiver is on duty

Financial counseling for Fairfax families

Round-the-clock care can run $9,000–$28,000/month — financial planning matters. Resources:

  • Geriatric care managers with financial expertise
  • Elder law attorneys in the Fairfax area (asset planning, Medicaid)
  • Long-term care insurance specialists
  • VA-accredited claims agents (free for original A&A claims)
  • Reverse mortgage counselors (HUD-approved)

Mental health support for Fairfax caregivers

The medical reality: caregivers of high-needs seniors develop chronic conditions at significantly higher rates. Active mental health support is preventive, not optional:

  • Primary-care physician — annual physical, screen for depression and anxiety
  • Therapy with caregiver-burnout specialist (LCSW or psychologist)
  • Online therapy platforms (BetterHelp, Talkspace)
  • Fairfax-area religious or spiritual communities
  • Caregiver support groups (in-person or virtual)

Burnout prevention strategies for Fairfax caregivers

  1. Build defined breaks into the schedule (weekly day off, monthly weekend, quarterly week)
  2. Establish family rotation if siblings are available
  3. Use professional respite — paid for, not heroically declined
  4. Maintain your own medical care, exercise, social connection
  5. Engage a geriatric care manager for monthly check-ins
  6. Talk about it — caregiving in silence accelerates burnout

If you’re a Fairfax-area family caregiver of someone needing 24-hour care, the burnout risk is real. A 15-minute call with a senior care advisor can map respite and support that fits your situation. Talk to a 24HomeCareNearMe advisor when you’re ready.

Frequently asked questions

Where can Fairfax caregivers get free respite hours?

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Multiple paths. the Fairfax Area Agency on Aging's National Family Caregiver Support Program provides limited free hours (typically 40–200/year). The Alzheimer's Association local chapter near Fairfax offers dementia respite scholarships. Virginia's Commonwealth Coordinated Care Plus (CCC Plus) waiver covers respite for income-eligible Fairfax seniors. The VA covers respite for veterans through the Washington DC VA Medical Center. Most families combine multiple paths.

Are there 24-hour caregiver support groups in Fairfax?

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Yes — many. the Fairfax Area Agency on Aging's caregiver support coordinator runs groups specific to Fairfax. The Alzheimer's Association near Fairfax has dementia-focused groups. Inova Fairfax Medical Campus's family caregiver education programs include support. Many faith communities operate informal groups. Online options (Memory People, Caring.com) reduce the burden of attending in person while caregiving.

What if a Fairfax caregiver is having thoughts of self-harm?

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Call 988 (Suicide and Crisis Lifeline) immediately — available 24/7. The Alzheimer's Association 24/7 Helpline (1-800-272-3900) connects to local crisis resources. VA Caregiver Support Line (1-855-260-3274) for veterans' family caregivers. Most Fairfax-area hospital systems have crisis intervention teams. Caregiver burnout crossing into suicidal ideation is a medical emergency — don't handle alone.

Can Fairfax caregivers be paid for caregiving?

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Sometimes. The VA's Veteran-Directed Care program pays family caregivers of eligible veterans (typically spouses excluded, adult children eligible). Some Virginia Medicaid waivers pay family caregivers through consumer-directed models. FMLA provides 12 weeks unpaid job-protected leave. Check your employer's HR for paid family leave benefits — many large Fairfax-area employers now offer 4–12 weeks of paid family caregiver leave.

How do I find a Fairfax therapist who understands caregiver burnout?

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Ask your primary-care doctor for a referral; specify family caregiver context. Look for LCSWs or psychologists with caregiver-stress specialty. Fairfax-area Alzheimer's Association can refer to dementia-caregiver-aware therapists. Many in Fairfax accept Medicare and major insurance. Online therapy platforms (BetterHelp, Talkspace) also serve Fairfax with caregiver-experienced clinicians.