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The juggling act: how Tasmanian women are balancing family caregiving and personal health

From school runs in Hobart to caring for aging parents, women are learning that small, intentional health choices needn't compete with family responsibilities.

By Tasmania Wellness Desk · Published 27 June 2026 at 9:17 pm

3 min read

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The juggling act: how Tasmanian women are balancing family caregiving and personal health
Photo: Photo by Moonwanwan. ZP on Pexels

Sarah, a 42-year-old mother of two from Riverside, spends her mornings shuttling children to school on the Hobart Waterfront route before heading to her part-time role in the CBD. By evening, she's helping her 68-year-old mother with household tasks across town in Blackmans Bay. Sound familiar? For many Tasmanian women, the demands of family caregiving—whether raising children, supporting ageing parents, or both—can feel like a full-time job on top of everything else.

The tension between caring for others and caring for oneself is real. Recent wellness research suggests that women who prioritize family responsibilities often deprioritize their own health, leading to accumulated stress and reduced physical activity. Yet local wellness experts emphasize that this needn't be an either-or scenario.

"The key is integration, not isolation," says Dr. Emma Foster, a health researcher at UTAS. "Small, consistent choices—a 20-minute walk instead of a car journey, stretching while helping with homework, or brief strength work—accumulate into meaningful health outcomes without requiring dedicated 'me time' many women feel they don't have."

Tasmanian women are finding creative solutions. The Hobart Waterfront parkrun, held every Saturday morning at 8am, has become a informal hub where mothers, daughters, and caregivers walk or run together—some pushing prams, others with elderly relatives cheering from nearby benches. It costs nothing and takes just 30 minutes, fitting neatly into weekend schedules.

Others are using local geography strategically. Hiking kunanyi/Mt Wellington with family members transforms caregiving—a day out with aging parents or an adventure with children—into genuine physical activity. The summit walk takes 90 minutes and offers clean Tasmanian air, scenic reward, and shared wellbeing.

For indoor options, Hobart's community centers offer affordable ($8–12 per session) low-impact classes during school hours or early evenings. New Town and South Hobart branches have childcare available, acknowledging that family caregivers often can't leave home easily.

The wellness shift happening locally reflects a broader understanding: women's health isn't separate from family life—it's woven through it. Personal wellbeing and family wellbeing reinforce each other. When mothers and caregivers feel stronger, less stressed, and more energized, their families benefit too.

If you're managing competing demands on your time and health, a local GP can help tailor advice to your specific situation and family circumstances.

This article was compiled by AI from the sources linked above and screened before publishing. See our editorial standards.

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Published by The Daily Tasmania

This article was produced by the The Daily Tasmania editorial desk and covers wellness in Tasmania. See our editorial standards for how we use AI.

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