2020
An assisted living facility offers more than occasional assistance to the people who call it home. It offers a lifeline to maintain independence and assist residents in doing for themselves when they can. It does this while providing the safety net of help nearby for the things they cannot do for themselves. These are just a few of the ways assisted living care helps seniors maintain more independence.
Working With Residents to Explore New Approaches for Challenging Activities
In-home senior care is just as it sounds: it's in-home care for those who are elderly and unable to fully care for themselves. This type of care can be done on a full or part-time basis and is beneficial in many ways, even if the most basic care is given.
Many seniors prefer to live independently and entirely on their own, and this is the optimum situation to strive for. However, illness, injury, progressive age issues, and other concerns make it harder to live at home without help.
If you have a loved one who is suffering from dementia, Alzheimer's or another mental disease that affects the memory, it probably hurts you greatly to watch them wither away. That said, it's also likely you are interested in doing whatever you can to make your loved one's final days as comfortable as possible. It's for this reason that memory care services exist. Memory care professionals can be found in a local assisted living center and there are also memory care specialists who work in-home.