Support at home

When home care can work and when it may be too stretched

Home care can support personal care, routines, meals and daily safety while someone remains in familiar surroundings.

It works best when the visit pattern matches real needs rather than a hopeful timetable, especially where mobility, medication, continence or confusion are becoming harder to manage.

This guide explains what to check before choosing a home care agency and when to review the plan.

A weekly home care schedule on a kitchen table

Questions that decide whether home care is realistic

  • Can the person be safe between visits?
  • Are overnight risks manageable?
  • Does medication support need a trained care worker, a pharmacist review or a clinician?
  • Can the home be adapted for washing, stairs, transfers and emergency access?
  • Is there reliable backup if a family carer is ill or exhausted?

The common weak point is the gap between visits

A care plan can look adequate on paper and still fail in the empty hours between calls. Missed meals, falls, wandering, distress, missed tablets and carer burnout often happen outside scheduled visits.

When those gaps become the main risk, adding more short calls may help for a while. If the person needs frequent reassurance, hands-on support or supervision, live-in care or residential care may need a serious look.

Sources checked

These sources support the factual and high-stakes parts of this page.