Our approach

Care built on dignity and trust

We believe every person living with dementia deserves to be seen as a whole human being — with a history, preferences, and an identity that goes far beyond their diagnosis. That belief shapes everything we do.

Why we do this

Where we started, and what drives us

Dementia Companion was founded by people who had experienced dementia from the inside — as a nurse, and as a family member caring for a parent. Both had seen what good care could look like. And what it so often did not.

Too many people were receiving visits from rotating strangers, or no visits at all. Too many family caregivers were burning out in silence. And too many people with dementia were spending their days understimulated, lonely, and without a single person who knew their name — their real name, not just a first name on a care sheet.

We built Dementia Companion to do things differently. We start with the person — not the diagnosis, not the care plan, not the hours and minutes of a visit. We invest real time in matching. We commit to consistency. And we hold ourselves to one simple standard in every decision we make: would we be happy for our own mother, father, or spouse to receive this care?

The answer has to be yes — not probably, not mostly, but yes. That question has guided every hire we have made, every policy we have written, and every time we have had to choose between what is convenient and what is right.

A Dementia Companions caregiver walks arm-in-arm with an elderly client through a hallway, both sharing a gentle smile

“Would we be happy for our own mother to receive this care?”

How we think

Three principles we never compromise on

These are not aspirational statements on a wall. They are the things we return to whenever a decision needs to be made.

Person-first, always

Before we talk about dementia, we talk about the person. Who were they before the diagnosis? What have they loved, built, lost, and cherished? What makes them laugh? What do they still reach for? A diagnosis is a medical fact. It is not a person.

Everything we do — from matching to care planning to the language our companions use — starts from the individual outward. Not from the condition inward.

Relationship over rotation

Most care models are built for operational convenience — whoever is available, whoever is nearby, whoever fits the rota. We have deliberately built against that. Each person we support has one primary companion who knows them, is expected by them, and whose absence they notice.

That kind of relationship cannot be faked or shortcut. It takes time and consistent presence. The relationship is the care — not just a delivery mechanism for tasks.

Support the whole family

Dementia does not affect one person. It reshapes the whole family around it — children who become caregivers, spouses who lose their partner to a disease that has not yet taken them, siblings who disagree about what to do next.

We think of ourselves as a support for all of them. That means being available for hard conversations, honest about what we see, and consistent in communicating with everyone who needs to know.

What we stand for

The principles we live by

Dignity first

We treat every person as a capable adult with preferences, feelings, and rights — regardless of their cognitive abilities. We do not talk over people, make decisions without consent, or use language that diminishes. Dignity is not a policy position. It is the starting point for every interaction.

Trained & vetted companions

Every companion completes a specialist dementia awareness program before their first visit, passes a Level 2 AHCA background screening, and is interviewed in depth by our team. Training is ongoing — not a one-off box tick — because dementia care is complex, evolving, and demands continuous learning.

Consistent presence

We match each person with one primary companion and maintain that relationship over time. A familiar face, routine, and voice are among the most reassuring things we can offer someone living with dementia. Continuity is not a nice-to-have — in cognitive care, it matters enormously.

Personalised care plans

We build a care plan around the individual — their history, passions, sensory preferences, sense of humour, the music they danced to. A care plan is never a template. It is a living document that evolves as the person does, reviewed regularly with the family.

Our promises

What we commit to every family

These are not aspirational. They are specific, everyday commitments that every family working with us should be able to hold us to. If we ever fall short, we want to hear about it — and we will put it right.

  • We will be honest with you

    If we have concerns about your loved one's wellbeing, we will tell you. If we think you need additional or different support, we will say so. We will never tell you what you want to hear at the expense of what you need to know.

  • Same companion — every time

    We will protect the relationship between your loved one and their companion. We will not rotate companions for operational convenience, and if a change ever becomes necessary, we will manage the transition carefully and with plenty of notice.

  • A named contact always

    You will always have a specific person at Dementia Companion you can reach — someone who knows your family's situation and does not need to be briefed from scratch every time you call. Not a call centre, not a generic inbox.

  • We will keep you informed

    After every visit, a brief note is completed. Monthly reviews are held with family. Any significant observations are communicated promptly. You will never be left wondering how things are going.

  • Dignity in every interaction

    This is the simplest and most important commitment on this list. Every companion, every visit, every conversation — your loved one will be treated with patience, warmth, and complete respect. No exceptions, no excuses.

Our team

Who our companions are

Our companions come from all walks of life — former nurses, teachers, retired professionals, and people who have cared for a loved one with dementia themselves. What unites them is warmth, patience, and a genuine desire to make a difference to someone's day. We hire for character first.

We are selective. Not everyone who applies becomes a companion with us — we look for people who bring something that cannot be trained: genuine empathy, natural warmth, and an instinct for meeting someone where they are. Everything else can be taught. Those qualities cannot.

Every companion with us:

  • Completes specialist dementia awareness training before their first visit
  • Has passed Level 2 AHCA background screening (Florida's highest standard for care workers)
  • Is interviewed in depth by our team and personally vetted
  • Meets your loved one before visits begin, so you can decide whether the fit feels right
  • Receives ongoing training and supervision throughout their time with us
  • Is supported by our coordination team and never left without access to guidance

Find out if we are the right fit

A free initial conversation is all it takes to get started. No commitment, no pressure — just a chance to tell us about your loved one and see whether we can genuinely help.