Dementia SUPPORT

Support for families navigating dementia

Caring for someone living with dementia often means carrying responsibility without a clear roadmap. As needs change, families are left coordinating care, processing new information, and making difficult decisions – often while managing their own stress and uncertainty.

We provide clinician-led guidance and ongoing support to help caregivers and individuals living with dementia feel more informed, supported, and less alone over time.

Dementia SUPPORT

When dementia becomes part of your family’s life

Dementia rarely arrives all at once. It often begins with subtle changes, followed by appointments, testing, and conversations that can feel overwhelming or hard to process.

Caregivers commonly find themselves trying to:

  • understand what’s happening and what it means
  • keep up with medical information and recommendations
  • balance caregiving with work, family, and personal wellbeing

Many families feel like they’re learning as they go, without enough guidance or time to pause.

DEMENTIA SUPPORT

What this kind of support actually means

Support for dementia isn’t about one-time advice or checklists. It’s about having informed, steady guidance as questions, decisions, and emotions evolve.

Our care team works alongside families to help them make sense of diagnoses, prepare for conversations with healthcare providers, and think through decisions at a pace that feels manageable.

Support adapts over time, recognizing that dementia care is ongoing, not linear.

DEMENTIA SUPPORT

How caregiving support works for families navigating dementia.

Making the day-to-day feel more manageable

As dementia progresses, even routine tasks can feel heavy. Coordination takes energy, and details add up quickly.

Changes in behavior can be especially confusing. Agitation, repetition, resistance, sleep disruption, or sudden mood shifts often leave caregivers wondering what they did wrong or how to respond.

We help families understand the what and the why behind these behaviors. By recognizing common patterns associated with dementia, caregivers can respond more calmly and confidently, often preventing escalation before it happens.

This may include support around appointments, care coordination, and understanding when additional services or resources may be helpful.

The goal is not to take over. It is to reduce friction and help caregivers feel more equipped in the moments that matter most.

Planning with the future in mind – without rushing it

Many caregivers worry about what’s next but feel unprepared to plan.Support helps families look ahead thoughtfully, without forcing premature decisions.

By understanding how needs may change and what options exist, planning can feel steadier and less reactive.

This approach helps families avoid crisis-driven choices and feel more confident over time.

Support for caregivers, not just care tasks

Caring for someone with dementia often brings grief, frustration, guilt, and exhaustion.

But caregivers need support too.

We provide emotional and mental health support to help caregivers process what they’re experiencing, feel heard, and sustain their own wellbeing over time.

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Rated by caregivers
CAREGIVER TESTIMONIAL

“Having someone explain things clearly and check in regularly made a stressful situation feel much more manageable.”

Caregiver

KElly C
Dementia support

Guidance through every stage of dementia

For individuals living with dementia

While much of our work is caregiver-focused, individuals living with dementia are also supported. We help patients feel included, respected, and informed to the extent they wish and are able, always centering dignity and compassion.

What to expect when you get started

Getting started is simple and pressure-free. You’ll connect with a member of our care team to talk through your situation, ask questions, and understand what support could look like for you and your family.