Caregiver Support is Falling Short

New research highlighted by The HR Brew is a clear warning sign for employers: roughly half a million women left the U.S. workforce in 2025, and 42% of women who voluntarily exited cited caregiving responsibilities as the main driver.

The issue isn’t just whether leave exists; it’s whether support is actually flexible, predictable, and usable when caregiving needs arise. Caregiving rarely follows a neat timeline. When policies feel rigid or fragmented across FMLA, state-paid leave, ADA, and company programs, employees are forced into impossible choices.

Where HR can make the most significant impact:

  • Design leave programs for intermittent, changing needs instead of one-time absences.
  • Pair leave with flexibility, such as adjusted schedules, reduced hours, or phased returns.
  • Simplify the experience by coordinating laws, benefits, and internal processes.
  • Give managers clear playbooks, so support is consistent, not situational.
  • Use data to spot caregiver strain before it turns into attrition.



This week’s check-in: If a caregiver asked for support today, would your process feel clear and supportive, or overwhelming?

To read the full article from HR Brew, click here.

More Resources

Year-end is the perfect window to tighten the records that protect your people and your program. A clean, chronological file can be the difference between a quick resolution and a costly dispute in 2026—especially where FMLA, ADA, PWFA, and state

Flu season has arrived, and with COVID still lingering, HR teams should be ready for a surge in medical and caregiver leave requests. Key steps to stay ahead: Preparation now helps reduce compliance risks and keeps your workforce supported during peak illness