For someone with dementia, the world makes more sense in the place they have lived for years. We provide non-medical dementia and Alzheimer’s home care in Fort Worth, with a small fixed team so the face is always familiar.
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A new face every shift creates anxiety, agitation, and sometimes refusal of care. A familiar one is the routine that keeps the day calm.
Caregivers redirect when frustration sets in, never correct or argue. Familiarity over confrontation, every time.
Calmer lighting, simpler activities, earlier evening routines. We adjust before the agitation starts, not after.
Home review for exit awareness, locks, alarms. Eyes on your loved one through the windows of risk.
Patience and routine. Bathing, dressing, grooming handled with the kind of care your loved one would give themselves.
Familiar music, photo albums, simple games, walks in the neighborhood. Engagement matched to their history.
On the schedule the family and physician have set. Caregivers prompt and document; never administer.
Photo placeholderMost of the families who call us about dementia care are calling for the spouse or adult child who has been the primary caregiver and is exhausted. Regular respite hours let you stay healthy enough to keep going.
“My great grandma is 100 years old (literally) and they take amazing care of her. Katie has great communication and locks in on any concerns or questions we have. I highly recommend!”
People with dementia rely on recognizing the person in front of them. We assign a small, fixed team of caregivers per client and we do not rotate them out unless something changes.
Recognition is the routine. Same faces, week after week, until something has to change.
Communication, redirection, sundowning, wandering risk. Trained for what dementia care actually requires.
Katie pairs caregivers based on temperament, history, and how your loved one is now. Match held from day one.
Hours scale, second caregiver added per shift, 24-hour coverage when symptoms progress. No new contract each time.
Dementia care across Tarrant County, with caregivers trained for the specific challenges of memory loss.
A free, no-pressure conversation with Katie about your loved one’s stage and what kind of support would help right now.