The Difference Between Home Care and Home Health Care

Veterans Senior Care – How to Tell which Type of Home Care Service Your Veteran Loved One Needs

When your parents have decided to age at home with some assistance, home care and  home health care are generally the two options. The one they choose depends on what their needs are. Basically, they are both care in the home for your senior loved one but one has a medical component and the other one doesn’t.

Home care is also known as senior care, elder care and a few other similar names. This involves help with everyday tasks of living. This could include home care and personal care. It might also include transportation and travel companions.

Elderly health care might also be called home health care services or senior health care services or a similar name. As long as it has the word “health” in the description, it generally signifies that the person supplying the care is a licensed professional in health care, whether a therapist or registered nurse.

Prices for health care are higher than those for home care, so make sure you choose the one your elderly senior really needs. The health care may be a temporary issue. For example, your senior loved one has just returned from the hospital and needs to recover at home. You may want to consider some health care for a while. After that, you could switch over to home care.

Medicare doesn’t cover all forms of home health care, so you will want to check and see if your specific situation has any coverage. Home health care may require a doctor’s prescription.

If you are considering any type of home care, you can check with your home care agency and see if you can get an assessment done to determine your elderly loved one’s exact needs.

Home care is very helpful for seniors when it comes to having the assistance they need with tasks such as bathing, dressing and fixing meals. It also goes much farther than that. It provides your senior loved one with a companion – someone to talk to, to go to their physician appointments with them, and to help them remember to take their medications. If your senior family member has some specific needs, check with the agency to see how those needs can be met.

Caregivers often become the senior’s loved and trusted friend. It’s vitally important to have human contact on a regular basis. Loneliness and isolation lead to depression, which is something many seniors face, unfortunately. Having a companion on a daily basis really lights up the senior’s day and gives them something to look forward to. Social interaction for the elderly loved one is just as important for good mental and physical health as eating a balanced diet is.

For more information and to learn about Veterans Senior Care, contact Veteran’s Home Care at (888) 314-6075.

 

Bonnie Laiderman, CEO

Bonnie Laiderman, founder of Veterans Home Care®, has helped more than 20,000 veterans and their spouses receive in-home care through the unique VetAssist® Program. Started in 2003 as a one-woman operation, Bonnie has overseen the growth of the company to become the national leader and unparalleled experts in VA Aid and Attendance benefits for home care. Veterans Home Care has also earned the Better Business Bureau's Torch Award for Ethics and Inc. 5000 award of fastest-growing companies seven times. Now with offices coast-to-coast, Veterans Home Care serves our veterans in 48 states throughout the country.
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