EDUCATION & TRAINING

Confidence in the Caregiver Role

Hands-on caregiver education from an Occupational Therapist and Aging Life Care Manager® — taught in your home or your community.

Suddenly responsible for someone you love?

Most family caregivers are thrown into the role without preparation. Whether you're caring for a parent recovering from surgery, a spouse with dementia, or supporting from a distance — the right training turns guesswork into confidence.

You don't need to figure it out from YouTube.

Training Built Around Your Family's Real Situation

We don't deliver pre-recorded modules. Every session is shaped by the specific person you're caring for, your home environment, and your most pressing concerns. Most families start with a free phone consultation, then we meet in your loved one's home for hands-on instruction. You leave each session with skills you can use that day.

Caregiving Is Learnable. Let's Build Your Skill Set.

With over 20 years of experience as an Occupational Therapist, I help families and professional caregivers build the practical knowledge that turns daily care into something sustainable.

What We Train On

Family Caregiver Training

Safe transfers, mobility assistance, medication management, fall prevention, and dementia communication — taught in your loved one's home.

Senior Community Programs

Resident clinics, staff training, and continuing education for assisted living communities, memory care, and home care agencies.

Topic-Specific Sessions

Hospital discharge prep, advance care planning, equipment use, and other individualized topics based on your family's needs.

Common Topics Families Ask About

Frequently Asked Questions

Family caregivers, adult children supporting an aging parent, spouses caring for partners, and long-distance family members preparing for in-person visits. Training is also useful for paid caregivers your family employs.

Common topics: safe transfers and mobility assistance, dementia communication strategies, medication management, fall prevention basics, hospital discharge handoffs, navigating long-term care decisions, and self-care for the caregiver.

Yes — most training is delivered in the home where your loved one lives. Training inside the actual environment is more effective than classroom-style sessions because techniques can be practiced where they’ll be used.

Sessions typically run 60–90 minutes. Most families benefit from 2–4 sessions over a few weeks rather than one marathon visit.