Home Care vs. Memory Care for Dementia
When should a family move a loved one with dementia from home care to a memory care facility? A Texas placement specialist explains the tipping points.
Most families start with home care when a loved one is diagnosed with dementia — it’s familiar, it’s what the senior wants, and it feels like the caring choice. But as dementia progresses, home care reaches limits that memory care is purpose-built to address. Understanding those limits before a crisis forces the decision leads to much better outcomes.
Home care’s limits — and when memory care becomes necessary
Home care is appropriate early in dementia when supervision needs are modest and the caregiver is capable and not burned out. The clearest signals that home care is no longer sufficient: wandering outside the home (even once), more than two falls in 90 days, a family caregiver showing signs of burnout or health decline, the senior refusing to cooperate with hired caregivers, or behaviors (aggression, sundowning) that caregivers cannot safely manage. Waiting for a crisis — a fall, an exit event, an injury — forces an emergency placement that is more disruptive than a planned transition.
Questions Families Ask About This Decision
Often no. Full-time home care (24/7 coverage) costs $4,000–$8,000+/month in Texas — comparable to or exceeding memory care rates. Part-time home care costs less but leaves supervision gaps that are dangerous for wanderers.
Key tipping points: one outdoor wandering incident, significant fall history, family caregiver exhaustion, behavioral symptoms the caregiver can’t manage safely, or repeated refusal of hired caregivers. Don’t wait for a hospitalization to make the decision.
Initial distress is common — but studies show most memory care residents adjust and many thrive within 3–6 months, partly because social isolation at home is replaced by peer community and structured engagement. Placing before full late-stage dementia means the senior can still adapt.
If the person has significant cognitive impairment, their capacity to make placement decisions may be limited. This is when having healthcare Power of Attorney (POA) matters enormously — it allows a designated family member to make placement decisions when the senior can no longer make safe choices.
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