How to Help Aging Parents Stay in Their Own Home Safely and Affordably
Most families supporting an aging parent are already juggling more than one kind of help: maybe a home health aide, definitely their own time, and possibly a program through the local Area Agency on Aging. Here’s how to fill in the piece that’s usually missing — non-medical home upkeep — without taking on all of it yourself.
1. Separate Medical Needs from House Needs
Start by sorting what’s actually going on into two buckets: things related to your parent’s health and personal care, and things related to the house itself. The first belongs with a doctor or a home health agency. The second — lawn care, gutters, repairs, technology — is where non-medical support like ours fits.
2. Get an Honest Read on Safety Risks
Clogged gutters and overgrown walkways aren’t just cosmetic — they’re fall risks. Prioritize anything that could cause an injury first: gutter cleaning, walkway power washing, and clearing tripping hazards.
3. Set Up Recurring Support, Not One-Time Fixes
A single cleanup doesn’t solve an ongoing problem. Recurring lawn care, seasonal gutter cleaning, and a standing relationship with someone who can coordinate contractors keeps the house from sliding back into the same state.
4. Don’t Overlook Technology
A working computer, phone, and medical alert device are part of staying connected and safe at home. If your parent has an unused device or is nervous about a new one, get it set up properly — it’s a small thing that has an outsized effect on daily life.
5. Compare the Real Cost Before Assuming a Move Is Necessary
Before assuming assisted living is the only path, add up what non-medical support would actually cost against a facility’s bundled monthly fee. For many families, targeted non-medical help is the more affordable — and more comfortable — choice for years longer than expected.
You don’t have to figure this out alone or from a distance. A local non-medical support partner can take the house-related worry off your plate entirely.