Family last safety net in dementia care
As Alzheimer's cases rise in China, loved ones shoulder burden amid limited institutional support and deep-rooted expectations of filial duty. Wei Wangyu reports.
Teaching families to let go
Not all families accept this approach easily. When Jin's team first suggested avoiding a feeding tube for Guan, her daughter hesitated. In China, medical restraint is often misread as neglect.
"Families equate medical aggression with devotion," Jin said. "We have to teach them that not doing certain things can also be an act of love."
This reframing from intervention to presence, from prolonging life to preserving meaning, runs against powerful social currents. Nursing homes remain stigmatized as places for "unfilial" families. Professional caregivers are undervalued and undertrained. Meanwhile, demographic change has shrunk family size, leaving fewer hands to share the load.
Yet even as institutional care expands, families remain the last safety net. They absorb the emotional shock of diagnosis, manage daily routines, negotiate with doctors, and live with the consequences of every decision.
Late at night, Wei sits beside his mother's bed, listening for changes in her breathing. There is no sense of resolution, only endurance. "My mother's memory will not return, and I always know that the disease will progress," he said.
But in the quiet repetition of care, the spoon lifted, the hand held, Wei said that he has found what devotion means.
"For a long time, I thought love meant fighting the disease," he said. "Now I think it means staying with her, even when there's nothing left to fix."






















