Adult Day Health Center
Caring for someone with a disability, TBI, Alzheimer’s, dementia or stroke takes a lot of time and energy. Let us partner with you and your loved one.
While your loved one is at the center, you can continue to support your family by going to work, resting, running errands or taking care of other needs. Stimulating your loved one’s mind during the day will create a relaxing evening and restful night, allowing you the same luxury.
Services Offered
- Nursing
- Adult Day Services
- Respite Care
- Dementia Care
Features Include
Our Adult Day Health Center is open to adults ages 21+ who have memory, intellectual, physical, and mental impairments.A LPN meets with participants and their families to determine the level of care required and uses individual plans of care to provide a variety of health, social, recreational, and therapeutic activities.
Like anyone, your loved one needs and deserves to have a caring, stimulating, and enjoyable environment which supports the capacity for self-care and encourages positive feelings of dignity and self-worth.
Activities Include:
• Life Skills
• Creative Arts, Music, and Crafts
• Exercise
• Recreational Activities
• Socialization and Group Activities
• Assistance with Personal Hygiene
• Intergenerational Participation with our Child Development Center
• Light Breakfast, Nutritious Lunch, and Afternoon Snacks
Our staff are professionally trained and credentialed including a Licensed Practical Nurse, Certified Nurse Assistants, and Activity Director.
Private pay or financial assistance is available through DHS, Developmental Disabilities Service Division, Veterans Administration and the Medicaid Advantage Waiver Program.
Hours of operation are Monday – Friday, 7:30a.m. – 5:30p.m.
She calls it ‘going to school’. Mom was on hospice last year after she broke both of her hips. DHS got her enrolled in the Adult Day Program at Easter Seals and her whole attitude changed. I think if she can continue to come here she can live to be 100, because that is just how happy this makes her.
—Aunita Pearce