"Carol Levine" is the Director of the Families and Health Care Project of the United Hospital Fund.

In 1991, she founded The Orphan Project: Families and Children in the HIV Epidemic.

From 1987 to 1991, she was the director of the Citizens Commission on AIDS in New York City. She is a fellow of the Hastings Center, an independent bioethics research institution.

More Carol Levine on Wikipedia.

You make a lot of adjustments in the early years, and it gets easier.

We'll give it a good shot. We could do well or we could get killed.

This is a tremendous sense of guilt and burden that children should not have to bear.

Being thrust into the role of caregiver without any preparation is difficult under any circumstances.

I've been teaching tennis for 25 years.

Because men who do any significant kind of caregiving are often seen by family and friends as heroic, they are more likely to be offered social support and tangible assistance by them.

We had no jobs, no place to live. At his first job he worked for $400 a month.

It is a safe assumption.