Dementia changes the daily routine in ways that make home feel unsafe — forgotten stoves, wandering at night, confusion during familiar tasks. Preferred Care at Home trains caregivers in Tri-Cities specifically for memory care, so your loved one stays safely at home in Johnson City, Kingsport, or Bristol with structured support that keeps family informed.
Caring for a family member with dementia is physically and emotionally exhausting. Preferred Care at Home provides consistent, trained caregivers who understand memory loss — not generalists unfamiliar with behavioral changes. Care plans adapt as dementia progresses through each stage.
Dementia care at home combines safety supervision, behavioral support, structured routine, and family coordination. Every service is designed to slow functional decline and preserve quality of life.
Wandering is the most dangerous behavior in dementia and a leading reason families in Northeast Tennessee seek professional care. Caregivers maintain visual proximity, redirect safely, and report any new wandering behaviors immediately to family and coordinators.
Home safety checks identify unsecured exit points, stair hazards, and kitchen risks. Caregivers work within the existing home environment without requiring expensive modifications, though they will recommend changes when safety requires it.
Dementia worsens when daily routines are unpredictable. Caregivers follow a consistent schedule — same wake time, same meal sequence, same activity rhythm — which reduces confusion and behavioral episodes throughout the day.
Gentle reality orientation, conversational prompts, and environmental cues such as labeled cabinets and photo displays keep clients anchored to time and place. These interventions are adapted as cognitive decline progresses.
Sundowning, agitation, and verbal outbursts are common across all dementia types and exhausting for family caregivers to manage alone. Professional caregivers are trained in de-escalation techniques that address the emotion behind the behavior without confrontation or restraint.
When specific triggers — hunger, fatigue, pain, overstimulation — are identified, caregivers proactively adjust the environment and schedule to prevent episodes rather than respond to them. Behavioral patterns are documented and shared with family.
Bathing, dressing, and toileting are often resisted by dementia patients who feel frightened or confused by the process. Caregivers use familiar language, a gentle approach, and consistent sequencing to make personal care feel safe and routine rather than intrusive.
Dignity is preserved at every step. Our caregivers understand that resistance often comes from fear, not willfulness, and they are trained to respond with patience and skill rather than force or frustration.
Family caregivers in Johnson City and Kingsport who manage dementia care full-time face serious burnout risk. Scheduled respite hours — a few mornings each week or extended weekend coverage — allow primary caregivers to rest, work, and maintain their own health.
Respite care is not secondary care. The same trained caregiver follows the established routine, maintaining continuity so the dementia patient does not experience the confusion of a new face. The family caregiver returns to a situation that has not deteriorated.
Understanding what to expect at each stage of dementia helps families make better decisions about care levels, medical appointments, and planning for the future. Preferred Care at Home coordinators provide guidance, refer to local resources, and connect families with the First Tennessee Area Agency on Aging and Disability.
Regular family meetings, care plan reviews, and responsive communication keep adult children informed and empowered — whether they live in Northeast Tennessee or out of state. We bridge the gap between the home and the family support network.
Step 01
A coordinator visits to assess the home environment, document current abilities and limitations, and identify the dementia stage. This shapes every component of the care plan.
Step 02
We build a detailed care plan addressing safety, routine, behavioral strategies, personal care, and family communication — written in language caregivers can follow consistently every shift.
Step 03
The same caregiver handles every scheduled visit. Consistency is not a preference in dementia care — it is a clinical necessity. We protect this assignment unless a change is unavoidable.
Step 04
Initial visits include coordinator oversight to verify the plan is working and the caregiver-client relationship is established. Behavioral patterns are documented from the first day.
Step 05
As dementia progresses, care needs increase. Our coordinators schedule regular reassessments and update the plan — adding hours, new tasks, or clinical coordination — without requiring families to restart the process.
These are the situations families across the Tri-Cities region describe when they call us for the first time.
Challenge
What It Looks Like
How We Help
Stove left on, appliances misused
What It Looks Like
Kitchen safety incidents signal that unsupervised time has become dangerous.
How We Help
Caregivers supervise kitchen use and identify when safety modifications are needed.
Wandering out of the home
What It Looks Like
Description
A senior found outside at night or walking down a road represents an acute safety crisis.
How We Help
We provide supervision and document wandering patterns for the medical team.
Aggressive or agitated behavior
What It Looks Like
Description
Sundowning, verbal outbursts, and physical agitation exhaust family caregivers rapidly.
How We Help
Trained caregivers de-escalate without confrontation and identify behavioral triggers.
Personal hygiene declining
What It Looks Like
Description
Resistance to bathing or changes in continence indicates cognitive decline affecting daily routines.
How We Help
We provide consistent, calm personal care using dementia-appropriate techniques.
Family caregiver reaching burnout
What It Looks Like
Description
Primary caregivers missing work, declining health, or expressing despair are at crisis point.
How We Help
Scheduled respite shifts restore balance and prevent caregiver breakdown.
Diagnosis just received
What It Looks Like
Description
A new dementia diagnosis creates immediate planning needs that families are not prepared for.
How We Help
We provide early-stage support and plan updates as the disease progresses over time.
Celebrating life, dignity and independence.®
Our Johnson City office serves families across the Tri-Cities region and surrounding Northeast Tennessee communities. We focus on helping seniors and older adults live independent lives in their own homes, close to the people and places they know.
We understand TennCare CHOICES, VA Aid and Attendance, and ECF CHOICES funding pathways. Ask about the wide range of non-medical services available 1 to 24 hours per day, and about qualified live-in caregivers who can provide 24-hour peace of mind for you or your loved one.
We Serve:
Yes. Our caregivers are trained in non-medical dementia care including safety supervision, routine maintenance, behavioral support, and personal care. We care for clients in their own homes in Johnson City, Kingsport, Bristol, and surrounding communities.
The earlier the better. Early-stage dementia care focuses on routine reinforcement, safety, and caregiver introduction before a crisis occurs. Starting care early means the client and caregiver build a relationship before cognitive decline makes new introductions difficult.
Caregivers maintain close supervision during high-risk periods, use safe redirection techniques, and report any wandering episodes immediately. Home safety evaluations identify exit points that need securing. We do not use physical restraint.
Yes. Most dementia clients also have physical care needs such as mobility assistance, incontinence care, and medication reminders. We build integrated care plans covering all non-medical needs in a single, coordinated schedule.
We make every effort to assign one consistent caregiver. In dementia care, consistency is critical because familiar faces reduce confusion and agitation. If a backup caregiver is ever needed, we introduce them alongside the regular caregiver before a solo visit.
TennCare CHOICES and the First Tennessee Area Agency on Aging and Disability may fund non-medical dementia care for eligible seniors. Long-term care insurance is another common funding source. Our coordinators can help identify options applicable to your situation.
Caregivers are trained in verbal de-escalation and environmental management. They identify triggers, adjust the environment proactively, and remove themselves from physical harm. We do not tolerate abuse and do not use physical restraint.
We coordinate with the client’s existing medical team at Ballad Health, Quillen VA, and other Tri-Cities providers. While we do not provide clinical services, we share care observations and support appointment attendance.
Care plans are updated as dementia advances. We can increase hours, add overnight coverage, and coordinate with hospice or skilled nursing as end-of-life care becomes relevant. We stay involved through every stage.
Call our Tri-Cities office at (865) 692-4000 or complete the contact form. A coordinator will schedule a free in-home assessment within 24 to 48 hours and have a care plan ready before the first shift.
Preferred Care at Home of Tri-Cities
2726 E Oakland Ave Suite 101
Johnson City, TN 37601
(865) 692-4000
Tennessee PSSA License #L000000038642
Services may vary depending on the licensing of each Preferred Care at Home Franchise location. Each location is individually owned and responsible for controlling and managing day-to-day business operations.