Professional Dementia Care at Home
A Practical Guide for Families
Person-centred routines, safe behaviour support, medicine management, home safety and a family care system that protects both the person and the caregiver.
Many people living with dementia prefer to remain in a familiar home. This can support comfort and identity, but home care is only successful when safety, health needs and caregiver capacity are reviewed honestly.
The goal is not to force perfect memory or behaviour. It is to preserve dignity, reduce avoidable distress, support remaining abilities and create a reliable system for emergencies, medicines, personal care and caregiver relief.
1. Understand the diagnosis and watch for sudden change
Dementia is a syndrome caused by several brain diseases. It affects memory, language, reasoning, attention, behaviour and daily activities, and it is not a normal part of ageing. Alzheimer’s disease is the most common cause; vascular dementia, dementia with Lewy bodies, frontotemporal dementia and mixed forms may require different care.
Confirm the diagnosis
Record the usual baseline
Sudden confusion is urgent
2. Build a familiar but flexible daily routine
A predictable rhythm can reduce uncertainty, but the plan should follow the person’s lifelong preferences, energy and abilities rather than a rigid clock. Offer one activity at a time, allow extra time and preserve independence wherever safe.
| Part of day | Examples | Safety and comfort |
|---|---|---|
| Morning | Wake, toilet, wash, dress, breakfast and prescribed medicines | Use simple choices, familiar clothing and adequate time |
| Daytime | Walking, household tasks, music, gardening, conversation or rest | Match activity to ability; avoid overstimulation and prolonged inactivity |
| Evening | Meal, toilet, calm activity and bedtime routine | Reduce noise, manage pain and provide safe lighting before gradually dimming |
Daylight, regular movement, meaningful activity, hearing and vision support and treatment of pain can help sleep and daytime function. A fixed nap cutoff is not suitable for everyone.
3. Respond to distress, aggression and walking about safely
Behaviour changes are often a form of communication. Before trying to stop the behaviour, check for pain, hunger, thirst, toilet needs, constipation, infection, poor sleep, medication effects, fear, loneliness, sensory overload or a task that is too difficult.
Communicate calmly
When agitation rises
Walking and leaving home
4. Manage medicines safely
Use one current medicines list
Investigate refusal
Do not crush or hide medicines casually
Review sedating medicines
Non-drug approaches should usually be tried first for distress or behaviour that challenges. Antipsychotic medicines have significant risks and are generally reserved for severe distress or risk of harm after clinical assessment.
5. Make the home safer and support daily health
Reduce hazards
Support food and fluids
Maintain movement and function
Plan ahead
6. Protect the caregiver and organise the family system
Dementia care should not depend on one exhausted person. Write down who handles medicines, meals, appointments, finances, night supervision and emergencies. Use shared calendars or handover notes and name a backup caregiver.
Schedule real breaks
Watch caregiver warning signs
Ask for skills training
7. When home care may no longer be enough
The decision is not based only on “stage”. A higher level of support may be needed when there is repeated unsafe leaving, fire or cooking risk, frequent falls, aggression that cannot be safely managed, severe night-time disturbance, inability to eat or drink safely, complex nursing needs, repeated hospital visits, no reliable supervision or caregiver exhaustion.
Options include increased homecare hours, day services, respite, nursing support, residential dementia care or palliative care, depending on goals and clinical needs.
8. Choosing professional support
Ask whether caregivers receive dementia-specific training, how behaviour and sudden changes are escalated, how medicines are documented, what happens if a caregiver is absent, whether overnight care is available, how family updates are handled and which clinical professionals can be involved.
Related KIN information: elderly homecare, home physical therapy, residential elderly care, occupational therapy and mental health support. Confirm current staffing, technology, scope and fees directly.
Summary
Good dementia home care combines person-centred communication, a familiar but flexible routine, attention to physical causes of behaviour, safe medicine systems, home modifications, caregiver respite and clear thresholds for seeking more support.
Choose a convenient branch
Please confirm current services, staffing, availability and fees with the selected branch.
Frequently asked questions
About home care, behaviour, medicines and caregiver support