Personal care, around the clock
Awake caregivers on duty every hour of the day — because needs don't keep office hours.
The resident who needs help with daily living
Twenty-four-hour personal care is for adults who can no longer manage the tasks of daily life on their own — getting out of bed, bathing, getting dressed, moving safely from room to room, eating meals, taking medication, using the bathroom.
For some residents this is the result of dementia, a stroke, or a chronic illness. For others it's the gradual reality of aging. Either way, the expectation is the same: a caregiver is here, awake, at every hour — so your loved one is never alone in a moment of need.
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The daily care your loved one will receive
- Awake caregiver on duty 24 hours a day, 7 days a week
- Help getting in and out of bed safely
- Bathing, showering, and personal hygiene assistance
- Dressing in clothes the resident chooses
- Help with toileting and incontinence care
- Mobility assistance — walker, cane, wheelchair, or transfer support
- Help eating and drinking when needed
- Medication reminders and oversight
- Repositioning to prevent pressure sores for bed-bound residents
- Companionship — conversation, reading, music, gentle company
- Coordination with doctors, nurses, and family
- Emergency response — caregivers trained in first aid and CPR
- Daily wellness checks and care notes
- Calm, patient presence at every hour
Care that adapts to the person, not the schedule
Most facilities have a "morning round" — every resident gets up, is bathed, and is brought to breakfast on roughly the same schedule. It's efficient. It's also exhausting and humiliating for the resident who would rather sleep until 9, or who has always preferred showers in the evening.
In a six-bedroom home, we don't need that kind of efficiency. Your father can sleep until he's ready. Your mother can have her bath when she likes the temperature outside. We work around the resident — at every hour, around the clock — because we have the people and the time to do it.
Awake means awake. Our overnight caregiver is up, alert, and on the floor — not napping in a back room. If a resident needs help to the bathroom at 3am, someone is there in under a minute.
My mother fell at 2am at her last home and lay on the floor for forty minutes before anyone came. That can't happen here — and we can sleep at night again because of it.