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100-1075 North Service Road West , Oakville, ON L6M 2G2

About Comfort Keepers

Comfort Keepers provides award-winning in-home care for seniors and other adults in need of assistance with daily activities. Our highly trained and dedicated caregivers can help your loved one stay in their home for as long as safely possible—a dream come true for many elders.

Care Services

In-home care isn't a one-size-fits-all approach. Comfort Keepers provides home care services tailored to each individual's needs and unique situations.

Areas Served

Uplifting In-Home Care Services for Seniors & Other Adults Right Where You Need It. Comfort Keepers Oakville, ON provides in home care services and senior care in the following cities in Ontario: Oakville

Alzheimer’s & Dementia Care in Oakville & Burlington

In-Home Burlington & Oakville Dementia Care for Families

If someone you love has been diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease or another form of dementia, the days can feel longer and the decisions harder. You may be noticing small changes: a missed appointment, a repeated question, a moment of confusion in a familiar room, or a routine that no longer feels simple.

Comfort Keepers® provides in-home dementia care in Oakville & Burlington for seniors and families who need structure, reassurance, and practical support. Our caregivers are trained in dementia care, matched thoughtfully to each client, and guided by a simple idea: care should help someone keep living their life at home, not step away from it.

We can help you think through what is happening now, what level of support may be appropriate, and how care can adapt if needs change.

What Is the Difference Between Dementia and Alzheimer’s Disease?

Dementia is not one condition. It is a general term for changes in memory, thinking, mood, behaviour, and daily function that are significant enough to affect everyday life. Alzheimer’s disease is the most common cause of dementia, but it is not the only one.

Dementia progresses differently for every person. Some changes are gradual. Some arrive in difficult stretches. What should stay constant is the person underneath: their preferences, their humour, the music they have always loved, the way they take their tea, and the routines that still help the day feel familiar.

Good dementia care begins there. Not with the diagnosis alone, but with the person.

How Interactive Caregiving™ Supports Dementia Care at Home

The Comfort Keepers approach to dementia care is built around Interactive Caregiving™, a way of providing support that helps clients stay mentally, physically, and socially engaged rather than simply attended to.

In practice, that can mean:

  • Listening to favourite music from a meaningful era, together
  • Looking through family photographs and talking about the people in them
  • Going for a walk along the lake or through a familiar neighbourhood
  • Working on a simple recipe the client has cooked for decades
  • Reading aloud, doing gentle activities for memory care, or talking about the day’s news
  • Keeping daily routines steady so the day feels more familiar and less overwhelming

These activities are not just ways to pass the time. Familiar routines, meaningful conversation, movement, and shared moments can help make daily life feel calmer, more connected, and more recognizable for someone living with dementia.

What In-Home Dementia Care Can Include

In-home dementia care in Oakville & Burlington can include practical support with personal care, daily routines, safety, companionship, and family respite. Every plan of care is built around the person, but families often reach out for help with some combination of:

  • Personal care services, including bathing, dressing, grooming, and toileting
  • Medication reminders and routine cues
  • Meal preparation and gentle prompting at mealtimes
  • Safe walking, transfers, and fall prevention at home
  • Sundowning support in the late afternoon and evening
  • Overnight care so family caregivers can sleep
  • Companionship and supervision during the day
  • Transportation to medical appointments in Oakville and Burlington
  • Light housekeeping and laundry so the home stays calmer and more orderly
  • 24-hour care when needs become more complex

Care can start small, perhaps a few hours once or twice a week, and grow as needs change. Many families begin with one visit and adjust support over time as routines, safety needs, or caregiver stress change.

When Is Home Still the Right Place for Dementia Care?

Home can still be the right place for dementia care when familiar surroundings bring comfort, routines still help, and the person can be supported safely with the right level of care. For many families in Oakville & Burlington, the question is not only what support is available. It is whether their loved one can continue to feel safe, settled, and understood at home.

A favourite chair, a familiar kitchen, the usual walk, or the photos on the wall can all help make the day feel more recognizable. In-home care can support those familiar anchors while adding help with supervision, personal care, meals, reminders, mobility, and family respite.

The goal is not to preserve independence at all costs. The goal is to support the right amount of independence, safely and respectfully, as needs change.

When Oakville & Burlington Families Often Reach Out for Dementia Support

Families often reach out for dementia care when home still matters, but daily life has started to feel harder to manage alone. The conversation usually begins when:

  • A diagnosis has just been made and the family is unsure what to do first
  • Sleep has become broken for the spouse or family members providing care
  • Wandering, falls, or unsafe moments at home have started to worry the family
  • A hospital stay is ending and the senior is returning home
  • The primary family caregiver is exhausted and needs respite
  • A long-distance family member is trying to coordinate care from another city
  • Sundowning or evening confusion has become harder to manage
  • The person living with dementia needs more routine, reassurance, or supervision during the day

If any of that sounds familiar, a conversation with our team can help you understand what level of support might be appropriate now and what could be added later.

Dementia Caregivers Chosen for Empathy and Trained for Support

Our caregivers, our Comfort Keepers®, are screened for empathy, patience, and judgment before they are offered a role. Those selected complete dedicated training in dementia and Alzheimer’s care, including how to recognize changing needs, support routines, respond calmly during difficult moments, and use Interactive Caregiving™ in everyday situations.

We also work carefully to match the right caregiver to the right client. Personality, language, interests, pace, and routine matter, especially in dementia care, where familiarity can help build trust.

A Calm Next Step for Dementia Care in Oakville & Burlington

If you would like to talk through what is happening at home, we are here. A short conversation costs nothing and can make the path forward clearer.

You can ask questions, describe what has changed, and learn what dementia care at home could look like for your loved one.

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Frequently Asked Questions About Dementia Care in Oakville & Burlington

Do you provide dementia and Alzheimer’s care at home care at home in Oakville & Burlington?

Yes. Comfort Keepers provides dementia and Alzheimer’s care at home in Oakville and Burlington, with support shaped around the person’s routines, safety needs, preferences, and stage of care. Care may include companionship, personal care, meal support, routine cues, supervision, respite for family caregivers, overnight care, and 24-hour care when needs become more complex.

Can dementia care start with just a few hours a week?

Yes. Dementia care can often begin with a few hours once or twice a week and grow over time if needs change. Starting small can help the person living with dementia get used to a caregiver gradually. It can also give families time to understand what kind of support is most helpful before increasing care.

How do caregivers support someone with Alzheimer’s disease?

Caregivers can support someone with Alzheimer’s disease by helping keep routines steady, providing reminders, encouraging safe activity, preparing meals, assisting with personal care, and offering calm companionship. The goal is not only to complete tasks. The goal is to help the person feel safer, more comfortable, and more connected in familiar surroundings.

Can in-home dementia care help with sundowning?

In-home dementia care can help families manage sundowning by supporting calmer late-day routines, reducing overstimulation, offering reassurance, and providing supervision during the hours when confusion or restlessness may increase. Sundowning can look different from person to person, so care should be shaped around the individual’s patterns, triggers, and comfort needs.

Is dementia care at home medical care?

Comfort Keepers provides non-medical in-home dementia care. That means caregivers can help with daily routines, personal care, reminders, safety supervision, companionship, meals, and family respite, but they do not replace medical diagnosis or treatment from a doctor or regulated health professional. Families should continue working with their loved one’s healthcare providers for medical guidance, medication decisions, and changes in clinical condition.

How do you match a caregiver with someone living with dementia?

Comfort Keepers considers the client’s personality, routines, interests, language, care needs, and family preferences when matching a caregiver. In dementia care, a thoughtful match matters because trust, familiarity, and pace can affect how comfortable the person feels with support. The aim is to make care feel as natural, steady, and reassuring as possible.

What should families look for when choosing Burlington or  Oakville dementia care?

When choosing dementia care at home, look for support that is personalized to the person, grounded in dementia care training, and flexible enough to change as needs progress. We highly recommend asking how caregivers are trained, how they are matched with clients, how familiar routines are supported, and whether care can begin with a few hours a week before growing into daily, overnight, or 24-hour support if needed. The right care provider should help your loved one feel safer, more comfortable, and more understood at home while giving your family clearer guidance and reassurance.

How do I know if my loved one needs dementia care at home?

It may be time to consider dementia care at home if memory loss, memory changes, confusion, wandering, falls, missed meals, personal care challenges, caregiver exhaustion, or unsafe moments are becoming harder to manage. A conversation with a local care team can help you sort out whether occasional visits, daily support, overnight care, or another level of care may be appropriate.

Can care change as dementia progresses?

Yes. Dementia care should adapt as needs change. Support may begin with companionship, reminders, and respite, then grow to include more personal care, supervision, overnight support, or 24-hour care if the person’s routines, safety, or family caregiving needs become more complex. A flexible care plan helps families avoid making every decision at once.

Individualized Home Care Options

Long-Term Home Care, 24 Hour Home Care & Short Term Care Options Customized for You