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Alzheimer's Care That Honors Who They Still Are

Alzheimer's Care That Honors Who They Still Are

We bring calm, trained support into the home, with steady routines and consistent caregivers. Care is built around your loved one’s history, habits, and what helps them feel safe.

We bring calm, trained support into the home, with steady routines and consistent caregivers. Care is built around your loved one’s history, habits, and what helps them feel safe.

Caregiver supporting an older man with a walker on an outdoor walk during in-home Alzheimer's care

The Caregiver Is the Care

Familiar caregivers aren't a luxury for families navigating Alzheimer's and dementia — they're the foundation of how care actually works. Here's how we find, vet, and place the people who walk into your home.

Familiar caregivers aren't a luxury for families navigating Alzheimer's and dementia — they're the foundation of how care actually works. Here's how we find, vet, and place the people who walk into your home.

What Families Should Be Considering

What Families Should
Be Considering

When Alzheimer’s or dementia progresses, families are often forced to make decisions fast while stress is already high. These are some of the questions we help families
think through:

How does your loved one respond best day to day?

Predictable routines that reduce anxiety
Familiar faces and gentle redirection
Familiar activities and music
Senior woman sharing tea with her caregiver during a daily Alzheimer's care visit at home
How does your loved one respond best day to day?
Predictable routines that reduce anxiety
Familiar faces and gentle redirection
Familiar activities and music
Senior woman sharing tea with her caregiver during a daily Alzheimer's care visit at home

What safety risks need to be managed at home?

Wandering and getting lost
Falls and unsafe movement
Cooking, meds, and sharp items
Family member assisting a woman with dementia as she moves safely through her home
What safety risks need to be managed at home?
Overnight needs, assisting with toileting
Personal care and mobility support
Medication reminders and daily routines
Family member assisting a woman with dementia as she moves safely through her home

How will care stay consistent as needs change?

Fewer caregivers, better trust
Clear updates to the family
A plan for hard evenings
Family members discussing care decisions for a loved one living with Alzheimer's
How will care stay consistent as needs change?
Conversation, music, and shared routines
Familiar games and puzzles
Time outside the house when possible
Family members discussing care decisions for a loved one living with Alzheimer's
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Alzheimer's Care That Honors Who They Still Are

Personal, in-home care focused on comfort, dignity, and quality of life for families navigating life’s
final chapter.

Caregiver supporting an older man with a walker on an outdoor walk during in-home Alzheimer's care

The Caregiver Is the Care

Familiar caregivers aren't a luxury for families navigating Alzheimer's and dementia — they're the foundation of how care actually works. Here's how we find, vet, and place the people who walk into your home.

Familiar caregivers aren't a luxury for families navigating Alzheimer's and dementia — they're the foundation of how care actually works. Here's how we find, vet, and place the people who walk into your home.

What Families Should Be Considering

When Alzheimer’s or dementia progresses, families are often forced to make decisions fast while stress is already high. These are some of the questions we help families
think through:

How does your loved one respond best day to day?

Predictable routines that reduce anxiety
Familiar faces and gentle redirection
Familiar activities and music
Senior woman sharing tea with her caregiver during a daily Alzheimer's care visit at home

How much time is being taken by daily tasks?

Wandering and getting lost
Falls and unsafe movement
Cooking, meds, and sharp items
Family member assisting a woman with dementia as she moves safely through her home

How will care stay consistent as needs change?

Fewer caregivers, better trust
Clear updates to the family
A plan for hard evenings
Family members discussing care decisions for a loved one living with Alzheimer's
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How We Approach Alzheimer's
& Dementia Care

Our care prioritizes structure, patience, and trained support. This is how we keep care calm, consistent, and person-first.

Person-First Care Planning

Dementia care works best when it is built around the individual, not the diagnosis. We learn their history, routines, and triggers, then shape care to what keeps them steady.

Safe Structure at Home

Small changes in the home and the day can prevent bigger problems later. We support safer movement, better cueing, and routines that lower wandering and fall risk.

Dementia-Smart Communication

We use clear language, patience, and a calm approach to reduce confusion and distress. When behaviors show up, we respond with reassurance and gentle redirection, not escalation.

More Than Supervision

The goal is not to fill time. It is to support connection and quality of life. We use simple, familiar activities like music, conversation, and reminiscence to keep days more grounded.

How We Approach Alzheimer's
& Dementia Care

Our care prioritizes structure, patience, and trained support. This is how we keep care calm, consistent, and person-first.

Person-First Care Planning

We create predictable days that reduce stress and bring comfort to clients and families, with caregivers trained in dementia and Alzheimer’s care.

Safe Structure at Home

Small changes in the home and the day can prevent bigger problems later. We support safer movement, better cueing, and routines that lower wandering and fall risk.

Dementia-Smart Communication

We use clear language, patience, and a calm approach to reduce confusion and distress. When behaviors show up, we respond with reassurance and gentle redirection, not escalation.

More Than Supervision

We work alongside hospice providers while staying deeply involved. Care stays flexible, and families are supported through every transition.

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How We Approach Alzheimer's
& Dementia Care

Our care prioritizes structure, patience, and trained support. This is how we keep care calm, consistent,
and person-first.

Person-First Care Planning

We focus on the physical needs that shape how each day feels. Careful positioning, personal care, and hands-on support that ease strain and promote comfort.

Safe Structure at Home

Small changes in the home and the day can prevent bigger problems later. We support safer movement, better cueing, and routines that lower wandering and fall risk.

Dementia-Smart Communication

We provide rides, errands, outings, and friendly support that helps clients stay active, connected, and confident in their daily life and routines.

More Than Supervision

We provide rides, errands, outings, and friendly support that helps clients stay active, connected, and confident in their daily life and routines.

What Makes Us Different

What Makes Us Different

No Place Like Home was built from lived experience. Our co-founder, Steve, found himself caring for two loved ones at once. His wife, after a traumatic brain injury, relearning daily life.

His father, living with Parkinson’s disease, nearing the end of his journey. In those moments, one thing became clear. Care should never feel transactional, rushed, or limited by red tape. That experience shaped everything we do.

No Place Like Home was built from lived experience. Our co-founder, Steve, found himself caring for two loved ones at once. His wife, after a traumatic brain injury, relearning daily life.

His father, living with Parkinson’s disease, nearing the end of his journey. In those moments, one thing became clear. Care should never feel transactional, rushed, or limited by red tape. That experience shaped everything we do.

Caregivers from No Place Like Home explaining their approach to Alzheimer's and dementia care
Caregivers from No Place Like Home explaining their approach to Alzheimer's and dementia care