Specialty
Alzheimer’s & Dementia Care
Specialized in-home care for memory challenges — delivered with the patience, training, and consistency these conditions require.
Specialized care for an unpredictable disease.
Alzheimer’s and other dementias don’t progress on a schedule. What works one week may not work the next. Caregivers need both training and flexibility — and families need to be supported through a journey that’s often longer and harder than expected.
Our dementia caregivers are trained in techniques proven to reduce agitation and confusion: familiar routines, gentle redirection, environmental cues, validation rather than correction. Just as important, we keep families informed about what we’re seeing — early signs of changes, what’s working, what isn’t.
What’s Included
Care tailored to daily life.
Routine & Structure
Predictable daily routines that reduce anxiety and create stability for someone whose memory is changing.
Memory Support
Cueing, prompts, and familiar objects that help your loved one stay oriented and engaged.
Behavior Management
Trained, patient responses to sundowning, confusion, agitation, and resistance to care.
Safety Supervision
Watchful presence to prevent wandering, falls, and unsafe behaviors in the home.
Engagement Activities
Music, photos, simple games, and reminiscence work — things that bring connection even as memory fades.
Family Communication
Regular updates on what’s working, what’s changing, and what to expect next.
Who This Is For
Dementia care is often the right fit when...
Families typically reach out at one of a few inflection points — sometimes after a diagnosis, sometimes after an incident, sometimes when the strain on a primary family caregiver becomes too much.
- There’s a new diagnosis of Alzheimer’s, Lewy body, vascular, or another dementia
- Your loved one has become unsafe being alone, even for short periods
- Wandering, getting lost, or leaving appliances on has begun
- Behaviors are becoming difficult for family members to manage
- A spouse or family caregiver is exhausted and approaching burnout
Common Questions
Things families often ask.
Can your caregivers handle behaviors like agitation or aggression?
Yes — with the caveats that every situation is different and the right response is always individual. Our dementia-trained caregivers know how to de-escalate, redirect, and stay calm. For very advanced or unsafe behaviors, we’ll work with you and any medical team to figure out the right level of care.
What if the dementia progresses and care needs change?
We adjust the plan. Dementia is progressive, and care needs change — usually gradually, sometimes abruptly. We’ll keep you informed about what we’re seeing and recommend changes when they make sense. We can scale from a few hours a week up to 24-hour live-in care without changing providers.
Do you support family members too?
As much as we can. Dementia is hard on the whole family, and we know that. We’ll point you to resources, support groups, and respite options. Sometimes the most useful thing we do is give a family caregiver a real break.
Have questions? We’re here to help.
Talk with us about your situation. There’s no obligation — just a real conversation about what your family needs.