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More People Are Caring for Dying Loved Ones at Home. A New Orleans Nonprofit Is Showing Them How.

More People Are Caring for Dying Loved Ones at Home. A New Orleans Nonprofit Is Showing Them How.

Liz Dunnebacke, executive director of Wake, pretends to be a person needing end-of-life care during the New Orleans nonprofit's free Community Deathcare Provider Training in September. (Christiana Botic/Verite News and CatchLight Local/Report for America)

Liz Dunnebacke isn鈥檛 dying, but for a recent end-of-life care workshop in New Orleans, she pretended to be.

Dunnebacke lay still atop a folding table that was dressed as a bed, complaining that her legs hurt. Registered nurse Ana Kanellos, rolling up two small white towels, demonstrated how to elevate her ankles to ease the pain.

鈥溾奙om鈥檚 legs are always swollen? Raise 鈥檈m up,鈥 Kanellos said.

About 20 New Orleans residents listened intently, eager to learn more about how to care for loved ones at home when they鈥檙e nearing the end of their lives. Attendee Alix Vargas said she used to be terrified of dying. But about three years ago, a close cousin鈥檚 death led her to attend group writing workshops, helping her embrace her grief and conquer her fear.

鈥溾奍鈥檓 feeling very called towards this work,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 definitely knowledge that I wanted to obtain and expand my mind in that way. And this is also something that we鈥檙e all going to encounter in our lives.鈥

The workshop made her think about a neighbor whose mother has dementia.

鈥溾奍 was immediately thinking, 鈥極K, there鈥檚 someone in my immediate orbit that is experiencing this,鈥欌 Vargas recalled. 鈥樷淗ere鈥檚 a practical way to put the mutual aid in use.鈥欌

Demand for home health care, including at-home hospice care, has skyrocketed since the onset of the covid pandemic, as has the number of family caregivers. An estimated 63 million people in the U.S. 鈥 nearly a quarter of all American adults 鈥 provided care over the previous year to another person with a medical condition or disability, usually another adult, according to by AARP and the National Alliance for Caregiving. In the past 10 years, about 20 million more people have served as caregivers.

A group of people sit on the floor while they watch a presenter show home caregiving techniques.
Nurse Ana Kanellos, a volunteer, demonstrates home caregiving techniques during Wake’s September workshop at the Healing Center in New Orleans. Wake is a nonprofit organization providing education and resources for death care.(Christiana Botic/Verite News and CatchLight Local/Report for America)
A portrait of a woman wearing a white dress shirt and tie.
鈥溾奍鈥檓 feeling very called towards this work,鈥 says Alix Vargas, who participated in Wake’s Community Deathcare Provider Training.(Christiana Botic/Verite News and CatchLight Local/Report for America)

With nearly 1 in 5 Americans expected to be 65 or older by 2030, health care experts predict the demand for at-home caregivers will continue to rise. Online resources for end-of-life care are widely available, but hands-on training to prepare people to become caregivers is not, and it can be expensive. Yet untrained family members-turned-caregivers are taking on nursing and medical tasks.

Donald Trump promised more support for caregivers during his 2024 campaign, including a pledge to create new tax credits for those caring for family members. He endorsed a bill reintroduced in Congress this year that would allow family caregivers to receive tax credits of up to $5,000, but the legislation hasn鈥檛 moved forward.

Meanwhile, the Medicaid cuts expected from Republicans鈥 One Big Beautiful Bill Act, which President Trump signed in July, could prompt states looking to offset their added expenses to reconsider participating in optional state Medicaid programs, such as the one that helps pay for . That would threaten to make dying at home even more unaffordable for low-income families, said advocates and researchers.

Advocates like Osha Towers are trying to help caregivers navigate the uncertainty. Towers leads LGBTQ+ engagement at , a national organization that focuses on improving end-of-life care, preparation, and education.

鈥淚t is certainly very scary, but what we know we can do right now is be able to just show up for all individuals to make sure that they know what they need to be prepared for,鈥 Towers said.

In New Orleans, a , which focuses on supporting family caregivers providing end-of-life and death care, is one of the organizations trying to help fill the knowledge gap. Wake put on the free, three-day September workshop where Dunnebacke, the group鈥檚 founder, pretended to be a dying patient. Such workshops are aimed at preparing attendees for what to expect when loved ones are dying and how to care for them, even without costly professional help. Full-time at-home care is rare.

鈥淵ou don’t have to have any special training to do this work,鈥 Dunnebacke said. 鈥淵ou just need some skills and some supports to make that happen.鈥

A woman stands in front of a group of people as she answers their questions.
Laurie Dietrich, programs manager for Wake, answers questions about the dying process and home caregiving during the nonprofit鈥檚 September workshop. (Christiana Botic/Verite News and CatchLight Local/Report for America)
A woman sits on a table during an aid demonstration. She smiles as she looks at another woman who is speaking.
Dunnebacke (center), Wake’s founder, helps lead the death care training session at the Healing Center. (Christiana Botic/Verite News and CatchLight Local/Report for America)

In some ways, the evolution of end-of-life care in the U.S. over the past century has come full circle. It was only starting in the 1960s that people shifted from dying at home to dying in hospitals, nursing homes, and hospice facilities.

Such institutions can provide immediate advanced medical support and palliative care for patients, but they often lack the human connection that home care provides, said Laurie Dietrich, Wake鈥檚 programs manager.

Now, more people want to die in their homes, among family, but with the support and technology that comes with modern medical facilities.

In the past decade, death doulas 鈥 who support the nonmedical and emotional needs of the dying and their loved ones 鈥 have grown in popularity to help guide people through the dying process, helping to fill that gap. Douglas Simpson, executive director of the , said his organization recognizes the lack of resources for death care, so it is training doulas to be community educators. He hopes doulas can be especially useful in rural communities and lead conversations about dying.

鈥淢aking people more open, more comfortable about talking about death and considering their mortality,鈥 Simpson said.

Death doula training varies depending on the organizer, but Simpson鈥檚 group focuses on teaching attendees about the dying process, how to maintain the autonomy of the dying person, and how to be aware of how they show up to a job and take care of themselves while caring for others.

Some people who attended Wake鈥檚 workshop had also attended some form of death doula training in the past. After Nicole Washington鈥檚 mother was killed in 2023, she considered becoming a death doula. But she thought the doula training, which can cost $800 to $3,000, was clinical and impersonal, as opposed to Wake鈥檚 community-based approach.

鈥淚 feel very energized, very uplifted,鈥 Washington said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 also really nice to be in a space with people who are familiar with death and grief.鈥

Ochsner Health鈥檚 Susan Nelson, who has worked as a geriatrician for 25 years, said there is a need for more specialized programs to train and prepare caregivers, like Wake鈥檚.

鈥淟earning caregiving skills is probably, unfortunately, more trial by fire,鈥 Nelson said.

Compassion & Choices is another organization trying to educate caregivers. Towers said the group鈥檚 training ranges from advanced planning to acting as a health care proxy to caring for the dying.

鈥淲e鈥檝e gone to a place in our country where we鈥檙e so removed from end-of-life care in a way that we didn鈥檛 used to be,鈥 Towers said.

Towers said the movement to care for people at home and give them community support has roots in the AIDS epidemic, when some doctors for AIDS patients. Friends, especially in the , started coordinating food delivery, visits, bedside vigils, and even touch circles, where patients could receive comforting forms of touch such as hand-holding to ease pain and feelings of isolation.

鈥淚 like to look at it as a blueprint for what we can get back to doing now, which is again just prioritizing community care,鈥 Towers said.

Nurse and volunteer Ana Kanellos (left) demonstrates home caregiving techniques on Liz Dunnebacke, who lays on a table in front of her. A group of people stand around them, watching the demonstration.
Kanellos (left) demonstrates home caregiving techniques on Dunnebacke. 鈥淵ou don’t have to have any special training to do this work,鈥 Dunnebacke says. 鈥淵ou just need some skills and some supports to make that happen.鈥(Christiana Botic/Verite News and CatchLight Local/Report for America)

This article was produced in collaboration with . Verite News reporter Christiana Botic contributed to this report.

[Correction: This article was updated at 1:30 p.m. ET on Nov. 25, 2025, to correct Osha Towers’ pronoun usage.]