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    Caregiver Resources

    Caring for Elderly Parents While Working Full-Time in Singapore

    Practical strategies for Singapore's sandwich generation to balance full-time work with eldercare responsibilities, including leave policies and support services.

    Elderwise Editorial TeamDecember 5, 20256 min read

    Singapore's sandwich generation faces a unique and intensifying pressure. Caught between raising children and caring for ageing parents, many working adults find themselves stretched thin across competing demands. The numbers tell a compelling story: more than 210,000 Singaporeans provide some form of informal caregiving to elderly family members, and a significant portion of these caregivers are employed full-time.

    Balancing work and eldercare is not just a scheduling challenge. It is an emotional, financial, and physical reality that touches every aspect of a caregiver's life. The good news is that with the right knowledge, support structures, and strategies, it is possible to manage both responsibilities without sacrificing your own wellbeing.

    Understanding the Challenge

    The demands of eldercare are inherently unpredictable. A parent's health can change suddenly, requiring emergency hospital visits, medication changes, or new care arrangements. This unpredictability sits uncomfortably alongside the structured demands of a full-time job.

    The Emotional Toll

    Many working caregivers experience guilt in both directions. At work, they worry about whether their parent is safe and comfortable. At home, they feel the pressure of unfinished tasks and career expectations. This chronic emotional tension, sometimes called caregiver ambivalence, is among the most underappreciated aspects of the caregiving experience.

    Financial Realities

    Eldercare costs can be substantial, from medical bills and medication to home care services and assistive equipment. Some caregivers reduce their working hours or turn down career opportunities to accommodate care responsibilities, which compounds the financial strain over time.

    Workplace Rights and Support

    Singapore has made meaningful progress in supporting working caregivers through legislation and employer guidelines.

    Caregiver Leave

    Under the Employment Act, employees in Singapore are not yet entitled to dedicated caregiver leave, but many employers now offer it voluntarily as part of their benefits package. The Ministry of Manpower (MOM) has encouraged employers to adopt flexible leave arrangements, and some progressive companies offer two to seven days of paid caregiver leave annually.

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    Table of contents

    • Understanding the Challenge
    • The Emotional Toll
    • Financial Realities
    • Workplace Rights and Support
    • Caregiver Leave
    • Flexible Work Arrangements
    • Building a Sustainable Care Routine
    • Assess and Prioritise Needs
    • Leverage Professional Services
    • Build a Support Network
    • Technology as an Enabler
    • Remote Monitoring
    • Care Coordination Tools
    • Protecting Your Own Wellbeing
    • Set Boundaries
    • Use Respite Services
    • Seek Professional Support
    • Looking Ahead

    Check your company's employee handbook or speak with your HR department about available leave options. If your employer does not currently offer caregiver leave, you may be able to use hospitalisation leave, annual leave, or unpaid leave to manage urgent caregiving situations.

    Flexible Work Arrangements

    Since April 2024, all employers in Singapore are required to have a process for employees to request flexible work arrangements (FWAs) under the Tripartite Guidelines on Flexible Work Arrangement Requests. This includes options such as flexible working hours, remote work, compressed work weeks, and part-time arrangements.

    Employers are required to consider these requests fairly and respond within two months. While employers may decline requests for legitimate business reasons, the guidelines create a structured pathway for working caregivers to negotiate adjustments that accommodate their care responsibilities.

    When requesting flexible work arrangements, frame your proposal in terms of how you will maintain or improve your work output. Presenting a concrete plan that addresses your employer's concerns increases the likelihood of approval.

    Building a Sustainable Care Routine

    Managing eldercare alongside work requires intentional planning and the willingness to build a support network beyond yourself.

    Assess and Prioritise Needs

    Start by conducting an honest assessment of your parent's actual care needs. Distinguish between tasks that require your personal presence, such as medical appointments and emotional support, and tasks that can be delegated to others, such as meal delivery, housekeeping, or routine medication management.

    This assessment is not a one-time exercise. As your parent's needs change, your care plan should evolve accordingly.

    Leverage Professional Services

    Singapore's ILTC ecosystem offers services that can significantly reduce the burden on working caregivers. Senior Care Centres provide supervised daytime programmes while you are at work. Home care services can handle personal care, nursing, and therapy visits on a scheduled basis. Meal delivery services ensure your parent receives proper nutrition even when you cannot be present.

    The Agency for Integrated Care (AIC) can help you identify appropriate services and navigate subsidy applications. Many of these services are substantially subsidised for eligible Singaporean citizens.

    Build a Support Network

    No one should carry the caregiving burden alone. Engage siblings and extended family members in the care plan, assigning specific responsibilities based on each person's availability and strengths. If family support is limited, consider joining a caregiver support group where you can exchange practical advice and emotional support with others in similar situations.

    Organisations such as the Caregivers Alliance Limited and Touch Community Services offer support groups, training, and counselling specifically for caregivers in Singapore.

    Technology as an Enabler

    Technology can bridge gaps in your care routine, providing monitoring, communication, and coordination tools that reduce anxiety and improve efficiency.

    Remote Monitoring

    Smart home sensors, personal emergency response systems, and video monitoring solutions can alert you to potential issues while you are at work. Motion sensors can detect unusual inactivity, medication dispensers can remind your parent to take their pills, and personal alarm buttons provide a direct line to emergency assistance.

    Care Coordination Tools

    Shared calendars, medication tracking apps, and care coordination platforms help families organise appointments, track medications, and communicate about care tasks. These tools are particularly valuable when multiple family members or professional caregivers are involved in the care routine.

    Set up a shared family group chat or care coordination app where all involved caregivers can post updates, flag concerns, and coordinate schedules. Even a simple shared document listing medications, doctor appointments, and emergency contacts can prevent critical information gaps.

    Protecting Your Own Wellbeing

    The sustainability of your caregiving depends directly on your own health and resilience. Working caregivers who neglect their own needs eventually reach a breaking point that serves no one.

    Set Boundaries

    It is acceptable and necessary to set limits on your availability. Identify the times when you are fully present for work and the times when you are focused on caregiving, and communicate these boundaries to both your employer and your family.

    Use Respite Services

    Respite care, whether through daycare centres, short-term residential stays, or home-based relief caregivers, gives you dedicated time to rest, attend to personal matters, or simply recharge. The government subsidises respite care for eligible families, making it more accessible than many caregivers realise.

    Seek Professional Support

    If you are experiencing persistent stress, sleep difficulties, or feelings of overwhelm, speak with a counsellor or therapist. The National Care Hotline at 1800-202-6868 and the Caregiver Support Line at 6460-4400 provide free, confidential support.

    Looking Ahead

    Caring for an ageing parent while working full-time is one of the most challenging roles anyone can take on. It requires resilience, adaptability, and a willingness to ask for help. But with the right systems, support, and mindset, it is also one of the most meaningful.

    At Elderwise, we are building tools that help working caregivers manage their responsibilities more effectively, from care coordination features to intelligent resource recommendations. Our goal is to ensure that no caregiver has to navigate this journey without the support they deserve.