Dementia support services are a type of home care that provides supervision, companionship, cueing, and help with daily tasks for individuals living with cognitive decline. They are one part of a broader home care plan that helps people remain safely at home as cognitive function changes.
Most families reach out when wandering, fall risk, or unsafe situations like leaving the stove on become regular concerns. Our caregivers are experienced, mature adults who share generational background with the people they care for. The same caregivers stay assigned to the same clients visit after visit, which reduces the confusion and agitation that come with unfamiliar faces.
Locally owned and operated
Serving families across Sarasota and Manatee counties
Our non-medical dementia support services are designed to keep your loved one safe, engaged, and steady at home.
Caregivers ensure your loved one is never unsafely unsupervised, preventing wandering, falls, or hazardous situations like leaving the stove on. The outcome is a safer home and steadier days.
Conversation, shared activities, and familiar human connection that keeps people engaged and reduces isolation as cognitive function changes.
Assistance with meals, medication reminders, light housekeeping, dressing, and other day-to-day tasks. Routines stay intact, which supports stability and lowers stress.
Bathing, grooming, and mobility support for individuals who need hands-on help alongside supervision.
Gentle prompts and redirection when confusion or repeated behaviors arise. Patient, consistent delivery helps reduce agitation in the moment and over time.

Light housekeeping, laundry, meal preparation, grocery shopping, errands, and medication reminders.

Bathing and showering assistance, dressing, toileting, grooming, and mobility support
In-home safety assessment, hazard identification, and ongoing monitoring by caregivers
Supervision, companionship, and structured social interaction for clients with cognitive decline
Socialization, pet care, and regular updates for family members who live far away
Relief for family caregivers, available around the clock including overnight
Rides to appointments and errands, provided as part of a broader care plan
Full range of services at zero out-of-pocket cost for eligible veterans through our VA contract
If any of these situations sound familiar, the risk of wandering, falls, or unsafe events at home is already elevated and should be addressed before a crisis occurs. Many families reach out when one of these scenarios applies.
Your loved one can still manage some daily tasks but needs regular oversight to stay safe at home.
Wandering, leaving appliances on, or getting disoriented at night are becoming regular worries.
You are the primary caregiver and need reliable coverage to take a real break without worrying.
Your loved one lives independently but the situation no longer feels safe without regular support.
A recent diagnosis of Alzheimer's disease or another form of dementia and your family is figuring out next steps.
The same caregivers, visit after visit
Consistency is the difference between care that works and care that wears everyone out. Caregivers stay long-term, which means your loved one sees the same familiar faces instead of constant change. We track the Continuity of Care Index to make sure the same caregivers stay with the same clients over time. For dementia, that consistency reduces confusion and agitation and helps caregivers spot subtle changes early.
Caregivers who share life experience
Our caregivers are experienced, mature adults who grew up in the same era as the people they care for. Shared memories, music, and cultural references make connection genuine, which is especially valuable when engaging someone whose cognitive function is changing.
VA, Medicare Advantage, and PACE contracts
We are contracted with all three programs. Only a small percentage of home care agencies hold contracts with even one. Eligible clients may receive dementia support services at zero out-of-pocket cost.
Most families go from first contact to active care within 48 hours to one week. Here is exactly what that process looks like.
Call us or reach out online. Our intake coordinator will spend about 15 minutes understanding your loved one's needs and confirm whether our services are the right next step. No obligation to move forward.
Documents are sent digitally for review and signature. If you prefer to handle this in person, we can accommodate that.
A registered nurse visits the home for a one-hour assessment. This typically takes place within 24 to 48 hours of your first call. For dementia, the nurse pays particular attention to wandering and fall risks in the home.
We match your loved one with caregivers based on skill set, availability, proximity, and personality.
Your care schedule starts, ranging from a few hours per week up to 24/7 coverage with rotating caregivers.
Most families pay privately, but eligible veterans and those with certain Medicare Advantage or PACE plans may have coverage options that reduce or eliminate out-of-pocket costs.
We bill every two weeks for services already provided. No upfront payment is required.
Eligible veterans receive services at zero out-of-pocket cost. The VA authorizes a set number of weekly hours, typically 4 to 20, and we schedule care accordingly. See our home care for veterans page for more detail.
Qualifying plans may cover home care at zero out of pocket. Coverage depends on your specific plan and authorized hours.
Individuals enrolled in the Program of All-Inclusive Care for the Elderly may receive services at no cost, based on authorized hours.
We provide dementia support services throughout Sarasota and Manatee counties. See the pages below for location-specific information, or call us to confirm coverage in your area.
Most families start with a short 10 to 15 minute call to talk through the situation and see whether our services are the right fit. There is no obligation to move forward.
There is no single moment, but there are clear warning signs that the level of independence your loved one once had is no longer safe. These include wandering or getting lost in familiar places, leaving the stove or other appliances on, forgetting to take medication, frequent falls or near-falls, becoming disoriented at night, and significant changes in judgment around safety. If any of these are happening regularly, it is generally time to put supervision in place rather than wait for a crisis. Supervision can start small, such as a few hours of companionship and oversight per week, and scale up as needs change. The in-home nurse assessment is designed to help identify which specific risks are most pressing in your loved one’s situation.
Alzheimer’s disease is one specific type of dementia. Dementia is the broader term for a group of conditions that affect memory, thinking, and behavior. When families search for “Alzheimer’s care” or “memory care,” they are typically looking for the same kind of support: supervision, companionship, help with daily activities, and safety monitoring at home. Seniors Helping Seniors® provides non-medical dementia support services for individuals living with Alzheimer’s and other forms of cognitive decline. We do not treat or manage the disease itself. If you are specifically looking for Alzheimer’s care, see our dedicated pages for Alzheimer’s care in Sarasota and Alzheimer’s care in Bradenton.
Yes. A registered nurse visits the home for an approximately one-hour assessment before any care begins. The nurse evaluates the client’s care needs, the home environment, and any safety concerns. This assessment typically happens within 24 to 48 hours of your initial call. For individuals with dementia, this visit is especially important for identifying the level of supervision needed and flagging wandering or fall risks in the home.
Our caregivers are experienced, mature adults who bring patience and consistency to every visit. They provide supervision, cueing, and redirection. Because our caregivers share generational and cultural background with the individuals they serve, they can often engage clients through familiar topics, music, or memories in a way that eases confusion or agitation. If a situation exceeds what non-medical home care can safely address, we will be transparent about that with your family.
We will make a change quickly. Our goal is long-term consistency, especially for individuals with dementia who benefit most from familiar faces. If the match is not working, we listen to your feedback and introduce a caregiver who is a better fit. Match changes are not common, but when they are needed, we handle them promptly.
Care can start from as few as 6 hours per week and scale up to 24/7 continuous coverage with rotating caregivers. Families managing dementia support often start with a few hours of companionship and supervision and increase over time as needs change. The right schedule depends on your loved one’s current level of independence and the availability of family members to fill in.
Yes. Care is available around the clock, including overnight. For overnight shifts, caregivers are required to remain awake throughout the night to safely assist clients, particularly those who get up frequently or who may become disoriented in the dark. Overnight coverage is scheduled as part of a broader care plan.
From your first call to the start of care, the typical timeline is 48 hours to one week. Simpler schedules can often be staffed within a couple of days. More comprehensive arrangements, such as daily or overnight coverage, take slightly longer to coordinate with multiple caregivers. If your situation is urgent, let us know on the intake call and we will do everything we can to move quickly.