Get answers to common questions about Dementia Care and Arbor Place.
Dementia Care
Dementia is a progressive neurological condition that affects more than memory. Over time, it can influence judgment, mobility, swallowing, communication, emotional regulation, and a person’s ability to recognize and explain discomfort, worry, agitation, or pain.
Medically focused memory care is structured to anticipate risk, monitor for early signs of change, and intervene before complications escalate. It recognizes that behavioral changes are often early indicators of medical or cognitive changes.
Individuals living with dementia may not reliably recognize discomfort or ask for help to relieve it.
If nursing oversight is only periodic, a nurse may be on-site only at specific times rather than continuously present throughout the day and night. At Arbor Place, licensed nursing is on-site 24/7, with continuous clinical presence and timely response.
Medical concerns often appear first as changes in mobility, appetite, alertness, or behavior rather than clear complaints. Ongoing nursing involvement supports close monitoring of hydration, nutrition, skin integrity, medication response, and overall health. Early identification and timely response help prevent avoidable discomfort, escalation, and hospitalization.
Effective dementia care depends on having enough caregivers present, so support can be unhurried and responsive, not rushed from one task to the next. Strong staffing allows calm, step-by-step cueing that preserves dignity and independence, provides reassurance, and supports relationship-based care with familiar, trusted caregivers.
When staffing supports time and proximity, caregivers can move at the individual’s pace, reduce anxiety, support mobility, and recognize subtle changes before they escalate. Prevention, reassurance, and quality of life depend on presence, patience, and a staffing model built to sustain best practices every day.
This is why, when you visit Arbor Place, you consistently see extra care team members nearby. You see hands being held, quiet one-to-one support, and group activities where residents are comfortable and engaged. You also see something else that matters: team members who are steady and unhurried, not constantly redirected by competing needs.
Our team is able to stay focused on the resident they are with and provide the time, attention, support, and reassurance that create a comfortable moment, a warm interaction, and meaningful connection.
Fall prevention begins with proactive staff presence.
With dementia, changes in balance, judgment, vision, and reactions to medication can increase the risk of falls.
Falls are rarely random events. They are often preceded by subtle signs such as restlessness, fatigue, confusion, or instability. Prevention depends on consistent supervision, environmental awareness, and timely support rather than alarms alone.
Extra caregivers are visible and nearby. Residents are guided with mobility, supported with transfers, and observed for early changes in gait or stamina. Because nursing and caregiving teams are closely integrated, concerns are assessed promptly, and adjustments are made.
We also use live-stream closed-circuit video monitoring. It allows our on-site care team to monitor what is happening in real time at all hours and intervene early when someone seems restless, ready to move, uncomfortable, confused, or in need of reassurance. This reduces distress and helps us get to a resident with attention and support before anything escalates or a fall occurs.
As dementia progresses, many individuals benefit from more consistent supervision and closer clinical attention to remain safe, comfortable, and well supported day to day.
Signs may include rising fall risk, wandering or exit-seeking, missed medications, changes in eating or hydration, sleep disruption, fluctuating alertness, anxiety or agitation, resistance to hygiene, or difficulty completing familiar routines safely without hands-on guidance.
These changes typically reflect cognitive overload or underlying distress rather than intentional behavior. At times, something medical may also be contributing, such as pain, infection, dehydration, medication side effects, or fatigue.
More support and nursing involvement allow concerns to be noticed earlier and addressed sooner, helping each day unfold more calmly and predictably.
Residential memory care is often a good next step when safety, supervision, or nursing support can no longer be managed reliably at home, day after day.
This decision is not only about urgency. It is about sustainability, stability, and making sure the level of support remains aligned with evolving needs.
In dementia care, medical or functional problems often begin with subtle shifts rather than clear complaints.
A change in gait, appetite, sleep, or mood may signal dehydration, medication intolerance, infection, or increasing instability. Recognizing these early signs allows timely responses before distress or hospitalization occurs.
Recognizing and responding early can prevent avoidable discomfort and escalation.
In dementia care, medical or functional problems often begin with subtle shifts rather than clear complaints.
A change in walking speed, appetite, sleep, or mood may signal dehydration, medication intolerance, infection, or increasing instability. Recognizing these early signs allows timely response before distress or hospitalization occurs.
Prevention depends on noticing what others might overlook.
How Care Works at Arbor Place
Yes. An RN or LPN is physically present on-site at Arbor Place 24 hours a day.
Some families are surprised to learn that in many memory care communities, licensed nursing is not on-site around the clock. Nursing may be scheduled for certain hours, with on-call coverage outside those times, which can delay real-time clinical assessment and support.
At Arbor Place, licensed nurses are physically present in our dedicated setting at all hours, serving no more than 16 residents. They work closely with an active care team, with staffing built to provide continuous support and supervision.
Our RNs and LPNs are part of daily hands-on care, guiding caregivers in real time and participating directly in assessment, comfort measures, medication management, and care decisions. Our full-time Director of Nursing is deeply involved in daily clinical care and is also readily accessible to families.
Our Director of Nursing leads clinical decision making, guides nurses and caregivers in real time, coordinates with physicians and other medical providers, and ensures care plans remain current as needs evolve.
Leadership is present and accessible, not remote or episodic.
Arbor Place uses live-stream closed-circuit monitoring to support real-time awareness and early intervention. It helps our on-site team notice early signs of restlessness or movement, and step in promptly with reassurance and hands-on support before a resident becomes uncomfortable or tries to move without assistance when it may be needed.
Technology is never a substitute for care. However, the right technology supports early awareness, comfort, and prevention so staff can provide reassurance and hands-on help at the right moment.
This approach reinforces prevention, comfort, and safety while respecting privacy and dignity.
A small setting allows caregivers to recognize subtle patterns, maintain consistent relationships, and respond quickly when something changes.
Familiarity is not simply comforting. It supports safety, stability, and more accurate clinical judgment.
Continuous supervision does not mean confinement. It means consistent staff presence and proximity throughout the day and night.
Caregivers remain present in shared spaces, assist with mobility transitions, monitor for subtle signs of discomfort or instability, and provide guidance before risk escalates.
Supervision emphasizes early recognition, calm redirection, and step by step support tailored to each individual.
We pay close attention to small shifts in mobility, appetite, mood, alertness, sleep, and engagement.
A slower step. A different expression. Restlessness at night.
Because we maintain a deliberately high staffing structure in one small setting, we are consistently present. That presence allows us to respond early, often before distress occurs.
For more than 20 years, Arbor Place has used live stream monitoring and continued advancing our approach as technology has evolved. It allows our team to notice early movement cues or restlessness and step in promptly, often before a resident becomes uncomfortable or attempts to move without assistance.
Technology does not replace attentive care. It supports early awareness so our staff can provide reassurance and hands on help at the right moment.
This approach reinforces prevention, comfort, and safety while respecting privacy and dignity.
No.
Our staffing structure is designed to carry full responsibility for care. Families do not need to hire outside private duty caregivers.
When additional support is needed as needs evolve, our team provides it.
No.
Residents remain in the same familiar home as needs progress. They do not move floors, units, or buildings to receive higher levels of support.
Remaining in place reduces anxiety and preserves trust. Care adapts around the resident within the same environment.
Our Director of Nursing and nursing team coordinate directly with primary care physicians, specialists, hospice providers, therapists, and other medical professionals.
When changes occur, we communicate observations and clinical context promptly. Care plans are updated as needed and shared clearly with families.
This coordination supports continuity and reduces fragmentation.
Admission and Clinical Fit
Arbor Place is designed for adults living with progressive neurological conditions that affect memory, judgment, mobility, communication, and daily functioning.
Our model is best suited for individuals who require close supervision, hands on assistance with daily activities, medication management, fall risk monitoring, and consistent clinical oversight within a stable environment.
Admissions are carefully reviewed to ensure placement is appropriate and safe within our care structure.
- Alzheimer’s disease
- Lewy body dementia
- Frontotemporal dementia
- Parkinson’s disease dementia
- Progressive supranuclear palsy
- Vascular and mixed dementias
- Stroke-related cognitive impairment
Care is tailored to how each condition affects safety, communication, daily functioning, and participation.
Arbor Place integrates licensed nursing presence and high supervision within a 16 resident setting. This allows us to support individuals who require:
- Medication administration and monitoring
- Ongoing assessment of hydration, nutrition, and swallowing
- Fall risk management
- Monitoring for changes in alertness, mobility, or behavior
- Post-hospital stabilization when clinically appropriate
Arbor Place is not a hospital or skilled nursing facility. Individuals requiring acute hospital-level intervention or long-term mechanical ventilation would require a higher-acuity medical setting.
Each admission is evaluated individually to ensure we can provide safe and appropriate care.
In certain circumstances, yes.
Arbor Place may be appropriate for individuals transitioning from hospital settings when dementia coexists with medical complexity and stabilization can be safely managed within our nursing and supervision model.
Each situation is reviewed carefully to determine appropriateness.
Arbor Place is designed for individuals living with dementia or related cognitive impairment who require structured supervision and nursing oversight within a residential setting.
- Acute hospital level medical care
- Skilled nursing facility level services, such as ongoing IV therapies or short term skilled rehabilitation that requires a dedicated rehab unit
- Situations that require a different level of behavioral support than our model is designed to offer
Our admissions process is designed to confirm that Arbor Place is an appropriate, safe, and optimal setting for the individual, both now and as needs evolve.
Support starts here
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