WIREFRAME — Larkin Family Care Center / Urgent Help: Child
Page A2 · /family-care/urgent/child/
Urgent Help

Get immediate help for your child.

Something has happened and you need guidance now. Choose the situation that best describes what's going on — each section has specific steps, resources, and ways to connect with a care expert.

Page context: The user arrived here after selecting "I need help right now" → "An older adult" on the landing page. The tone should be calm but direct — this person may be in a crisis. Content is organized by situation, not by topic. Every section ends with a path to a human expert.
Sticky utility bar: Scroll down to see it slide in. Three elements: (1) "← Family Care Center" escape hatch back to the landing page, (2) a pill dropdown showing the current page — click it to see all 5 interior pages grouped by urgency level, with color-coded dots (red = urgent, green = planning). This lets users switch pages without going back to the landing page. (3) A persistent "Talk to an expert" CTA. Appears on all content pages (A2, A3, B2, B3). Hidden on the booking page (C1) since you're already there.
Need to talk to someone now?
Skip the reading — schedule a conversation with a care expert who can help immediately.
Talk to an expert
Spec note: This is the #1 priority on this page. A stressed caregiver may not want to read accordion content — they want a human. This CTA links directly to /family-care/talk-to-an-expert/ and passes context (urgent + elder) so the advisor knows the situation before the call.
🚨
My childcare fell through
A provider cancelled, a nanny quit, or your usual arrangement broke down

Find backup childcare options fast

The childcare market has 100,000 fewer workers than before 2020 (Bureau of Labor Statistics). Expect long waitlists and fewer choices. Start with these resources to find care quickly:

Ask your network

Friends, co-workers, local community groups on nextdoor.com, local parent groups, and Facebook groups can be a good source for immediate recommendations when your usual care falls apart.

Get immediate local help

Dial 2-1-1 or visit 211.org — it's free, available 24/7, and covers 94.6% of the U.S. They can connect you to emergency childcare resources and backup care programs in your area.

Find a nanny agency

If you need a private caregiver quickly, both the International Nanny Association and the Association of Premier Nanny Agencies have member directories. Review the pros and cons before committing.

Transitioning to new care

Childcare changes are inevitable, but they can be stressful for both parents and kids. Once you've found a replacement, these tips can help make the change easier for everyone.

⚠️
I have a safety concern
Worries about a provider, facility, or your child's wellbeing in care

Check inspections and reports

A licensed program has continual monitoring to ensure it meets minimum standards for health and safety. Findings are reflected in state reports. Use the inspection tips to find your state's reports and understand how to read them.

Understand accreditation

NAEYC accreditation means the program has met 10 standards for high-quality early childhood education. It's a strong signal, but not required — many quality programs aren't accredited. Use the search tool to check.

Know what to ask providers

Whether you're evaluating a new provider or reassessing your current one, use the suggested questions checklist to make sure you have answers to all the key safety and quality questions.

💰
I'm struggling to pay for childcare
Costs are overwhelming and you need financial options now

Understand the costs

Infant and toddler care is significantly more expensive than preschool-age care. In some states, childcare costs make up more than 30% of a family's income. Costs vary greatly by region, age, and care type.

Use your employer benefits

Your Dependent Care Account (DCA) or Flexible Spending Account (FSA) lets you set aside pre-taxed dollars for childcare. A Dependent Care Assistance Plan (DCAP / DCFSA) can also help pay for the care of a qualifying dependent. Check your company's benefits portal for details.

Claim tax credits

The Child Tax Credit applies to each qualifying dependent child. The Dependent Care Credit could reimburse up to half your childcare costs while you work. The Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC) is available to employed, lower-income households.

Military family assistance

The federal government offers childcare subsidies to military families and Department of Defense personnel. Requirements differ by branch of service.

Budget planning

Use the Economic Policy Institute's Family Budget Calculator to generate a location-specific monthly budget that includes childcare costs for your area.

Content mapping: These three tiles consolidate content from the childcare flows (pages 112–143 of the flows deck). Tile 1 draws from Flow 1 (find childcare — market overview, provider search, nanny agencies, transition tips). Tile 2 draws from Flow 1 (inspections, accreditation, provider vetting questions). Tile 3 draws from Flow 2 (paying for childcare — costs, employer benefits, tax credits, military assistance, budgeting). Resources tagged here need to be confirmed against the actual resource library.

Your family depends on you. We're here to help.

Connect with a care expert who's guided hundreds of families through moments like yours.

Schedule a conversation