Local Care Experts • Fairfax

Personalized care in Fairfax for the ones you love

Our Fairfax team provides more than just a service—we provide peace of mind. Discover local resources, expert caregivers, and a community of support.

ElderCare Guide · Fairfax

Does your parent need help? Recognize the signs.

Many families miss early indicators. Our Fairfax care coordinators help you identify what to watch for and act before a crisis occurs.

01

Changes in Personal Hygiene

Unwashed clothes, skipped showers, or neglected grooming are often the first and most telling sign of difficulty with self-care or early cognitive decline.

02

Poor Nutrition & Weight Loss

Expired food, empty pantries, or unexplained weight loss signal difficulty managing meals. Nutrition suffers quickly when cooking becomes overwhelming.

03

Frequent Falls or Mobility Issues

Falls are the leading cause of injury among adults 65+. Even a single fall significantly raises the risk of another — and of a serious fracture.

04

Medication Mismanagement

Missed doses, expired pills, or confusion about prescriptions can cause serious health consequences — from uncontrolled blood pressure to dangerous drug interactions.

05

Social Withdrawal & Isolation

Dropping out of hobbies, refusing calls, or avoiding the community increases depression and cognitive decline risk. Companionship is a health imperative.

06

Cognitive Changes & Memory Gaps

Forgetting recent events, getting lost on familiar routes, or repeating the same question within minutes may indicate dementia or another condition requiring evaluation.

Talk to a Fairfax Care ExpertFree consultation · No commitment

The Care Spectrum

Personalized support across Fairfax.

01

Service Module

Personal Care Aide

Certified Home Health Aides provide hands-on help with bathing, dressing, toileting, and the activities of daily living.

02

Service Module

Homemaker Services

Meal prep, light housekeeping, laundry, and errands — keeping the household running so seniors can focus on living.

03

Service Module

Geriatric Assessment

A trained Geriatric Care Manager visits the home, assesses ADLs/IADLs, and builds a personalized care plan with cost estimates.

04

Service Module

Care Coordination

One care manager who coordinates everything — doctors, pharmacy, home health, and your in-home team — so you don't have to.

Trusted by Families in Fairfax

Real guidance, real support, right here in Fairfax.

Understanding Your Options

From in-home companion care to skilled nursing, we help you navigate the full spectrum of elder care. Most families start with a few hours per week.

Costs & Coverage

In-home care in your area averages $2,400–$8,400/month depending on hours. Medicare may cover short-term skilled care. We'll walk you through every option.

Your First Step

A free, confidential call with our Fairfax coordinator is always the best starting point. We listen first, then build a plan around what your family actually needs.

Contact Registry

A conversation is the first step.

Reach out to our Fairfax coordinator. We’re here to listen, understand, and provide the support your family needs.

Speak to us

703-520-2189

Our office

10721 Main St, Ste 304, Fairfax, VA

The Fairfax Factbook.

What are elder care services?

Elder care services is an umbrella term for the menu of in-home and community services that help older adults live safely and independently. The main categories: companion care, personal care (ADLs), home health (skilled clinical), adult day services, respite care, geriatric care management, and care coordination. Most families need a mix that evolves over time as their parent's needs shift.

How do I figure out what elder care services my parent needs?

Start with a geriatric assessment — a trained Geriatric Care Manager spends 60–90 minutes with your parent, reviews ADLs and IADLs, walks through the home, and produces a written care plan with cost estimates. The $300–$500 assessment fee usually pays for itself in avoided mistakes. The plan becomes your map for the next 6–12 months and your reference when interviewing agencies.

What are ADLs and IADLs?

ADLs (Activities of Daily Living) are the six basic self-care activities: bathing, dressing, toileting, transferring, eating, and walking. IADLs (Instrumental Activities of Daily Living) are the more complex tasks that maintain independence: meal prep, housekeeping, laundry, medication management, shopping, transportation, finances, and using the phone. Difficulty with ADLs typically signals need for personal care; IADL difficulty often points to companion care or homemaker services.

Is there a financial assistance for elder care services?

Yes. The main programs: Medicare (covers short-term skilled home health), Medicaid HCBS waivers (covers ongoing home care for income-eligible seniors), VA Aid & Attendance (for veterans and surviving spouses), long-term care insurance (if previously purchased), the Older Americans Act Title III programs, and PACE (Program of All-Inclusive Care for the Elderly) for dual-eligible seniors. Your local Area Agency on Aging is the right starting point.

What's the difference between a CHHA, CNA, and HHA?

The terms overlap. A Certified Home Health Aide (CHHA) has completed state-mandated training (75–120 hours) covering ADLs, infection control, and basic vital signs; they work in home care. A Certified Nursing Assistant (CNA) has similar training but is licensed for facility-based work. Home Health Aide (HHA) is the federal term used by Medicare-certified agencies. For home care, CHHA is the most common credential.

Can I hire an independent caregiver instead of going through an agency?

Yes — and you'll save 25–40 percent on the hourly rate. But you become the legal employer, handling payroll taxes, workers' comp insurance, backup coverage when they're sick, and supervision. For families who can manage that overhead and have a trusted referral, independent caregivers work well. For first-time families or complex care needs, agencies absorb the risk that's not worth taking on yourself.

How do elder care services change as my parent's needs grow?

Most families follow a predictable arc: weekly companion visits in early aging → daily companion care + transportation → companion + personal care (ADLs) → 24-hour live-in care → memory care facility or 24/7 awake care → end-of-life hospice. The transitions usually take years, not months. A good care coordinator helps you anticipate the next step before it becomes a crisis.

Do elder care services include nursing or medical care?

Some do, some don't. Companion care, personal care, and homemaker services are non-medical. Home health — RN visits, PT, OT — is medical, requires a physician's order, and is often Medicare-covered. The same family often uses both, with the agency coordinating between the home-health team (short-term medical) and the home-care team (ongoing daily support).

Let our family care for yours.