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Memory & Dementia Care

Where confusion is met with patience, every time

Who this is for

The Kind Of Resident This Serves Best.

Residents living with Alzheimer's disease, vascular dementia, Lewy body dementia, or other forms of progressive memory loss — at any stage — who benefit from a small, secure, familiar environment with consistent caregivers.

Our approach

How We Actually Do This.

We build the day around the resident, not the schedule. Familiar routines, familiar faces, familiar foods, familiar music. We don't argue with confusion — we step into it gently and lead the resident back. The home is small enough that residents don't get lost, and consistent enough that even those with significant memory loss come to recognize the rhythm of being here.

What's included

The Full Scope Of This Service.

  • Secure home environment designed for residents with memory loss
  • Consistent caregivers — same faces, every day
  • Familiar daily routines that reduce confusion
  • Memory-supportive activities (music, photo albums, simple tasks)
  • Trained de-escalation for sundowning and agitation
  • Coordinated with neurology and primary care
  • Family kept fully informed of progression
  • End-of-life care available as the disease progresses

"Mom has middle-stage Alzheimer's and the staff at Simon learned her in two weeks. They know she calls her late husband by his nickname, that she likes coffee with two sugars, that she gets nervous if the TV is too loud. That kind of attention is impossible at a big facility."

— Linda P., daughter of resident
Common questions

What Families Ask Us.

What stage of dementia do you accept?
We accept residents at any stage — early, middle, or late. We can also continue to care for residents as their dementia progresses, including end-of-life with hospice support.
How do you handle sundowning or agitation?
Calmly. We've found that familiarity, redirection, and a quiet environment work better than medication for most residents. When medication is needed, it's given carefully and never as a first resort.
Is the home secure if my loved one wanders?
Yes. Doors are monitored, the property is enclosed, and our small size means a caregiver always knows where every resident is.
Can my loved one keep familiar items in their room?
Absolutely. Familiar objects — photos, blankets, a chair from home — are some of the most powerful tools in dementia care. Bring them.

Have Questions About Memory & Dementia Care?

We're happy to walk you through how it actually works for your specific situation. No commitment, no sales pitch.