Dementia Care at Home in Scottsdale, AZ
Caring for someone with dementia — whether you’re a spouse, an adult child, or a healthcare professional helping a family navigate next steps — is exhausting, emotional, and rarely linear. Most families try to do it alone for too long.
At Seniors Helping Seniors® Scottsdale, we provide in-home dementia care across Scottsdale, Paradise Valley, Fountain Hills, and Northeast Phoenix — delivered by caregivers who are themselves seniors, and who know that the right kind of help feels less like a service and more like a trusted friend showing up.
We’re also a certified Medicare GUIDE Respite Care Provider, which means eligible families can access a $2,500 annual Medicare allowance toward in-home dementia respite care, plus dedicated care navigation and caregiver support — at no out-of-pocket cost.
Call us anytime: (480) 674-5400. One phone call is all it takes.
Medicare GUIDE Program — Free Dementia Care Support, Now Available
Medicare recently launched a program called GUIDE — Guiding an Improved Dementia Experience. It’s one of the most meaningful expansions of dementia care benefits in years, and most families have never heard of it.
We’re a certified GUIDE Respite Care Provider for the Scottsdale and Northeast Phoenix region. If your loved one qualifies, we handle the paperwork and the coordination — there is no administrative burden on you.
What the GUIDE program provides
- A dedicated dementia care navigator to coordinate care and connect families to essential community resources — transportation, meals, safety programs, support groups.
- Training and ongoing support for family caregivers to manage stress, improve home safety, and delay the difficult decision to move a loved one out of the home.
- A $2,500 annual respite care allowance, paid by Medicare, so your family can bring in trained in-home support without out-of-pocket cost.
Who is eligible for the GUIDE program
Eligible patients have:
- ✓ Traditional Medicare (Original Medicare — not a Medicare Advantage plan)
- ✓ A suspected or confirmed dementia diagnosis — Alzheimer’s disease, Lewy body dementia (LBD), frontotemporal dementia (FTD), vascular dementia, or another form
- ✓ Living at home or in the community (including Assisted Living Facilities and Independent Living Facilities)
Not eligible (under current GUIDE rules):
- ✕ Patients enrolled in Medicare Advantage plans
- ✕ Patients in SNP (Special Needs) plans
- ✕ Patients living in long-term care (skilled nursing facilities)
- ✕ Patients enrolled in Hospice or PACE programs
If you’re not sure whether your loved one qualifies, call us at (480) 674-5400 — we can usually clarify eligibility in a 10-minute conversation.
What Dementia Care at Home Looks Like
Dementia care is not a single thing. It changes with the stage of the disease, the person’s history, the household, and the family’s bandwidth. Our caregivers are trained to adapt — but the constant across every visit is the peer-to-peer presence that makes the Seniors Helping Seniors® model genuinely different.
Our caregivers help with:
Companionship & socialization
Meaningful conversation, shared activities, music, photo books, walks in familiar places — the human connection that quietly reduces agitation and slows isolation-driven decline.
Wellness & safety
Meal preparation suited to the senior’s diet and preferences, hydration reminders, fall risk monitoring, and environmental adjustments. The small things that prevent the big things.
Help around the house
Grocery shopping, errands, laundry, light housekeeping — restoring the rhythm of a household when keeping up has become exhausting.
Activities of daily living
Patient, dignity-preserving help with bathing, dressing, toileting, personal hygiene, and mobility. Delivered by caregivers roughly the same age as your loved one — which completely changes the dynamic.
Care coordination
Accompanying seniors to doctor visits, taking notes, and serving as an extra set of eyes and ears for families — especially long-distance family members.
Management of chronic conditions
Medication reminders, daily health observation, and reporting changes to the family before they become emergencies.
Transitional care
Specialized support during the high-risk period from hospital discharge to home, when families with a loved one with dementia face the greatest risk of rehospitalization.
Caregiver Burnout Is Real
Family caregivers carrying the weight of a parent’s dementia diagnosis are at serious risk of burnout — and the cost shows up in marriages, careers, and the caregiver’s own health.
From Caregiving in the U.S. 2020, the National Alliance for Caregiving and AARP’s landmark national survey:
- 53 million Americans are now unpaid family caregivers — an increase of 9.5 million in just five years, and more than 1 in 5 adults nationally.
- 2 in 5 caregivers (40%) report meaningful emotional strain from the role.
- 1 in 5 report feeling physically strained, and 1 in 5 report feeling alone.
- 21% of caregivers describe their own health as fair or poor — up from 17% in 2015 — and 23% say caregiving has made their health worse.
- 42% of caregivers of adults 50+ have had their personal savings eroded by caregiving costs; 10% report not being able to afford basic expenses like food.
The caregivers at greatest risk are those who work full-time, provide financial assistance, or have a parent living in their home — which describes many of the family caregivers we work with in Scottsdale, Paradise Valley, Fountain Hills, and Northeast Phoenix.
Professional in-home dementia care meaningfully alleviates this burden. Respite, even a few hours a week, restores the caregiver’s health, work capacity, and household financial stability.
When we care for your family, you care for yours.
This is why the GUIDE program exists. It’s also why respite care is one of the most overdue interventions in family caregiving — and why we encourage families to start sooner rather than later.
Source: National Alliance for Caregiving & AARP, Caregiving in the U.S. 2020
Our Service Area
We provide in-home dementia care across the East Valley:
We work alongside the major hospitals, memory care communities, and geriatric care managers serving this region — and our care coordinators are happy to be part of a broader care team.
What Happens When You Call
- You call us at (480) 674-5400. Andy, or our care coordinator, picks up. We listen to where your loved one is in their dementia journey, what you’ve already tried, and what would help most right now.
- We come to the home. A free in-home consultation is usually about an hour. We meet your loved one, walk the house, talk about routines, and quietly note safety opportunities.
- We check GUIDE eligibility, if applicable. If your loved one has Traditional Medicare and a dementia diagnosis, we’ll walk through GUIDE program eligibility on the spot and handle the paperwork from there.
- If you choose Seniors Helping Seniors, we match the caregiver carefully. Personality, pace, background, hobbies, schedule. The first visit happens within a few days — sooner in urgent situations.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the Medicare GUIDE program?
GUIDE — Guiding an Improved Dementia Experience — is a Medicare program that provides comprehensive dementia care support, including a dedicated care navigator, caregiver training, and a $2,500 annual respite care allowance. Seniors Helping Seniors® Scottsdale is a certified GUIDE Respite Care Provider serving Scottsdale, Fountain Hills, Paradise Valley, and Northeast Phoenix.
Who is eligible for the Medicare GUIDE program?
GUIDE is available to people who have Traditional Medicare (not Medicare Advantage), have a suspected or confirmed dementia diagnosis (Alzheimer’s, Lewy body, frontotemporal, vascular, etc.), and are living at home or in the community — including Assisted Living and Independent Living facilities. People in skilled nursing, hospice, PACE, Medicare Advantage, or Special Needs plans are not eligible.
Does Medicare pay for dementia care at home?
Eligible families can now access up to $2,500 per year for in-home respite care through the Medicare GUIDE program — and we are a certified GUIDE Respite Care Provider that handles the paperwork on your behalf.
Can my mom still get dementia care from you if she lives in an assisted living facility?
Yes. We provide dementia care in homes, Assisted Living Facilities (ALF), and Independent Living Facilities (ILF). GUIDE eligibility extends to seniors living in ALF and ILF, but not to those in skilled nursing facilities.
Are your caregivers trained in dementia care?
Yes. Our caregivers receive training in dementia communication techniques, structured routines, redirection, fall prevention, and the specific care challenges that arise with Alzheimer’s, Lewy body, frontotemporal, and vascular dementia. We match caregivers to clients based on personality, background, and the specific stage of the dementia journey.
How do I get started?
Call (480) 674-5400 for a free, no-pressure conversation. We’ll listen, answer your questions, and — if it’s a fit — schedule a free in-home consultation. If GUIDE eligibility is in play, we’ll walk you through it during the consultation.
Talk to Us
A free, no-pressure conversation with our office often answers more questions in 15 minutes than hours of online research.
📞 (480) 674-5400 — Available 24/7 for emergencies, Mon-Fri 8am-6pm for regular calls
Seniors Helping Seniors® Scottsdale Serving Scottsdale, Paradise Valley, Fountain Hills, and Northeast Phoenix A certified Medicare GUIDE Respite Care Provider. Member of HCAOA and AZNHA. Proudly caring for veterans.