Professional guidance for family caregivers Dementia-related behaviors—repeating questions, pacing, refusing care, accusations, agitation—are usually signals of distress or unmet needs, not “bad behav...
Mental health changes are common alongside dementia—depression, anxiety, psychosis, sleep problems, and sometimes sudden delirium. Knowing what to watch for and how to respond can make home life safer...
Aggression in dementia (hitting, kicking, shouting, cursing, resisting care) is usually a response to distress, not “bad behavior.” The goal is to reduce danger, find the cause, and restore calm. Here...
When someone you love is living with dementia, the most important question becomes: How do we keep them safe, comfortable, and connected to the life they know? As a home-health agency serving the Hou...
Small, consistent changes can reduce falls, ease confusion, and keep daily life calmer. Use this walkthrough to tune each space—then review monthly as needs change. Front Entry & Living Areas ...
If late afternoons bring new restlessness, confusion, or agitation, you may be seeing sundowning. It’s common in dementia and can be exhausting for families. The good news: small, steady changes—done ...
When memory changes make conversations harder, families can feel lost. The good news: small shifts in how you connect can lower stress, restore dignity, and make care safer. As a Medicare-certified h...
Familiar surroundings reduce stress and help preserve independence. With structure and the right supports, many people can remain safely at home longer. Families tell us they value: Routine: predict...
When someone you love begins to repeat questions, miss appointments, or seem “not quite themselves,” it’s natural to worry. As a Medicare-certified home-health agency serving Memorial and Greater Hous...