Download the Guide to Home Care for Northern KY Families to learn what home care is, what services may be included, when it may be time to ask for help, and how to begin the conversation.
When someone you love begins needing more help at home, it can be hard to know where to start. Maybe your mom is skipping meals. Maybe your dad is becoming more isolated. Maybe a spouse is recovering from a hospital stay and the family is worried about falls, bathing, medications, or being alone overnight.
For many families in Northern Kentucky, home care is the support that helps an older adult remain safe, comfortable, and independent in familiar surroundings.
At Connecting Hearts Home Care, we help families in Alexandria, Cold Spring, Erlanger, Florence, Fort Mitchell, Fort Thomas, Fort Wright, Union, Villa Hills, Wilder, and surrounding Northern KY communities understand their options and create a care plan that fits real life.
What Is Home Care?
Home care is non-medical support provided in a person’s home. It helps older adults with everyday activities that may have become difficult, unsafe, or overwhelming.
Home care may include help with:
- Companionship and conversation
- Meal preparation
- Light housekeeping
- Errands and transportation
- Bathing, grooming, and dressing
- Mobility support
- Safety supervision
- Dementia and Alzheimer’s support
- Respite for family caregivers
- Help after a hospital or rehab stay
- 24-hour support when more consistent care is needed
Home care is different from medical home health care. Medical home health may include skilled nursing or therapy ordered by a doctor. Non-medical home care focuses on practical daily support, safety, comfort, routines, and quality of life.
Why Families Choose Home Care
Most seniors want to remain at home as long as possible. Home is familiar. It holds memories, routines, pets, neighbors, favorite chairs, family photos, and a sense of independence.
But aging at home can become harder when daily tasks begin to change.
Families often begin looking for home care when they notice:
- A loved one is not eating well
- The house is not being kept up
- There are concerns about falls
- Bathing or dressing has become difficult
- A parent is lonely or withdrawn
- Memory loss is creating safety concerns
- A family caregiver is exhausted
- A loved one is coming home from the hospital or rehab
- The family lives too far away to check in often
- Overnight safety has become a concern
Home care gives families another layer of support, without forcing a move out of the home.
What Does a Home Caregiver Do?
A home caregiver helps with the activities that make daily life safer, easier, and more manageable.
Depending on the care plan, a caregiver may help with:
Companionship
Companion care can include conversation, games, walks, meal companionship, reading together, help with hobbies, and emotional support. For seniors who live alone, companionship can make a meaningful difference.
Personal Care
Personal care includes respectful assistance with private daily needs such as bathing, grooming, dressing, toileting, mobility, and hygiene. This type of support can help seniors feel clean, confident, and dignified.
Meal Support
Caregivers can help prepare simple meals, encourage hydration, assist with grocery lists, and make sure the senior has access to food throughout the day.
Light Housekeeping
Home care may include light housekeeping related to the client’s daily needs, such as laundry, dishes, changing linens, tidying living spaces, and keeping walkways safer.
Transportation and Errands
Caregivers may help with errands, appointments, grocery shopping, pharmacy trips, or transportation when appropriate.
Dementia Support
For someone living with Alzheimer’s disease or another form of dementia, home care may include routine, cueing, redirection, calm companionship, safety supervision, and support for family caregivers.
Hospital-to-Home Support
After a hospital stay, rehab stay, surgery, illness, or fall, a caregiver can help make the transition home less stressful. Families often need help with meals, mobility, bathing, transportation, and supervision during the first days or weeks back home.
Is Home Care Only for People Who Need a Lot of Help?
No. Many families begin with just a few hours of care each week.
Home care can be flexible. It may start with companionship, errands, or meal support. As needs change, the care plan can be adjusted.
Some families need short-term help after a hospitalization. Others need ongoing weekly support. Some need overnight or 24-hour care. The right plan depends on the person, the home, the family, and the level of support needed.
Home Care vs. Assisted Living
Home care is provided in the senior’s own home. Assisted living requires a move to a community setting.
Home care may be a good fit when a senior wants to stay home but needs help with daily activities, companionship, personal care, or safety. Assisted living may be considered when a person needs a more structured living environment or when home is no longer the safest option.
For many Northern KY families, home care is the first step because it allows the person to receive support without leaving familiar surroundings.
Home Care vs. Home Health Care
These terms are often confused.
Home care is usually non-medical support with daily living needs.
Home health care is medical care that may include skilled nursing, therapy, wound care, or other services ordered by a physician.
A person may receive both home care and home health care at the same time. For example, a home health therapist may visit a few times per week, while a home care caregiver helps with meals, bathing, safety, companionship, and daily routines.
Who Benefits from Home Care?
Home care may help:
- Seniors living alone
- Older adults recovering after hospitalization
- People with dementia or memory loss
- Seniors at risk for falls
- Adults who need help with bathing or dressing
- Family caregivers who need respite
- Spouses who are overwhelmed
- Adult children managing care from a distance
- Seniors who need help staying socially connected
- Families who want peace of mind
Why Local Home Care Matters in Northern Kentucky
Choosing a local home care agency matters because care is personal. Families need support from people who understand the communities they serve.
Connecting Hearts Home Care supports families throughout Northern Kentucky, including Alexandria, Cold Spring, Erlanger, Florence, Fort Mitchell, Fort Thomas, Fort Wright, Union, Villa Hills, and Wilder.
A local agency can help families think through real-life questions, such as:
- How quickly can care start?
- How many hours of care are needed?
- What type of caregiver support makes sense?
- Is the home safe enough right now?
- Does the family need respite?
- Is 24-hour care needed?
- What happens if care needs change?
When Should a Family Call About Home Care?
You do not have to wait for a crisis.
It may be time to ask about home care if:
- You worry about your loved one being alone
- You are checking in constantly
- Your loved one has had a fall or near-fall
- Meals, hygiene, or housekeeping are slipping
- Memory loss is creating safety concerns
- Your loved one is coming home from the hospital or rehab
- A family caregiver is becoming exhausted
- You are not sure what level of care is needed
A conversation can help clarify the next step.
Download the Guide to Home Care for Northern KY Families
If you are just starting to explore care options, Connecting Hearts Home Care has created a helpful resource for families.
Download the Guide to Home Care for Northern KY Families to learn what home care is, what services may be included, when it may be time to ask for help, and how to begin the conversation.
Talk With Connecting Hearts Home Care
If your family is wondering whether home care is the right next step, Connecting Hearts Home Care can help you talk through your options.
Call (859) 441-7977 to ask questions or learn more about care in Fort Thomas and Northern Kentucky.
FAQs About Home Care in Northern KY
What is non-medical home care?
Non-medical home care helps older adults with daily activities at home. This may include companionship, meals, errands, light housekeeping, bathing, dressing, grooming, mobility support, dementia support, respite care, and safety supervision.
Is home care only for seniors who need personal care?
No. Some seniors only need companionship, errands, meals, or light housekeeping. Others need more hands-on support with bathing, dressing, or mobility. The care plan depends on the person’s needs.
Can home care help after a hospital or rehab stay?
Yes. Home care can help seniors settle back in at home after hospitalization, rehab, surgery, illness, or a fall. Support may include meals, mobility help, bathing, transportation, and safety supervision.
Does Connecting Hearts Home Care serve Fort Thomas?
Yes. Connecting Hearts Home Care is based in Fort Thomas and serves families across Northern Kentucky, including Alexandria, Cold Spring, Erlanger, Florence, Fort Mitchell, Fort Thomas, Fort Wright, Union, Villa Hills, and Wilder.
How do we know how much care is needed?
The best way to begin is with a conversation. A care plan can be based on current concerns, safety needs, family support, routines, and how much help the senior needs throughout the week.