May 15, 2026
There’s a scene near the end of the movie “The Notebook” that stays with people long after the credits roll. Noah, aging and sharp-minded, sits beside his wife, Allie, in the care home where she lives. She has Alzheimer’s. She doesn’t always know his name. But he reads their love story to her every day. And sometimes, in a flash of clarity, she comes back to him. They dance. They hold each other. While his grown adult children ask him to come home, he insists that his preference is to stay with his wife in the safety and comfort of her long-term care community.
It’s fiction, yes. But it points to something deeply true: The people we love are part of what keeps us well. And when one partner’s care needs change, staying together isn’t just a romantic ideal—it’s one of the most health-protective decisions a couple can make.
What the research says
Studies consistently show that older adults who remain with their spouses enjoy measurably better health outcomes than those who live apart. Research published in the Journal of Gerontology found that married couples living together have stronger cognitive resilience, lower rates of depression, better medication adherence, and more robust immune function. Married older adults are up to 20% less likely to develop dementia than their single counterparts, a protective effect that persists even when one partner has significant health challenges.
The mechanism isn’t complicated. A spouse notices when you seem off. They encourage you to eat, sleep, and take your medication. They provide touch, routine, and the kind of calm that only decades of shared life can create. Researchers call this “co-regulation,” because long-partnered people help stabilize each other’s nervous systems, mood, and even physiology.
When care needs change
The challenge many couples face is that health doesn’t change at the same pace for both people. One partner may develop memory challenges. One may need physical support while the other is entirely independent. For a long time, this disparity felt like an unavoidable fork in the road.
But it doesn’t have to be. Couples making plans to move somewhere they can age together is something Randi O’Neal, Community Relations Director at Fieldstone of Bainbridge, sees frequently .
“It’s super common. Families tell us all the time that their parents want to stay together for as long as possible,” she said.
Today, senior living communities like Fieldstone of Bainbridge are designed around the full continuum of care—from independent living through assisted living and memory care, all on one campus—so that a couple can move in together and stay together, even as needs evolve. One partner can receive additional support, specialized programming, or memory care services while the other continues to live life fully, just steps away. They share meals. They take walks. They are still, in every way that matters, together.
The arrangement looks different depending on each couple’s needs. Some spouses live together in independent or assisted living. Others find themselves in different areas of the same campus.
“What’s lovely about that,”O’Neal noted, “is that the more independent spouse can come and go freely, and with communication from our staff, can bring their loved one out as much as they’d like.”
The gift of planning ahead
Couples who move into a community together, before a health crisis forces the decision, have the greatest flexibility, the widest range of choices, and the most time to settle in as a team. They can build friendships together, establish routines together, and create a home base that can hold both through whatever comes next.
One of the most meaningful benefits of making that move together, O’Neal explained, is what it does for the spouse who has been serving as the primary caregiver at home.
“So often, one partner has been carrying the full weight of caregiving, by the time they move in, they’re burned out,” she said. “Moving into a community together allows that spouse to step back from being the caregiver and simply go back to being a loving, supportive partner. The longer they get to do that, the better.”
Fieldstone of Bainbridge understands that couples deserve to have the choice to write the rest of their story together, with the support to do it well. Reach out to us to take a tour and find the perfect senior living community that will fit both your needs, now and in the future.


