Where Can I Find Short-Term Care for an Elderly Parent at Home?

When an elderly parent suddenly needs help at home, families often need answers quickly. Maybe your parent just came home from the hospital, your work schedule changed, you need to travel, or the regular family caregiver needs a break. Short-term care can give your family temporary support while your parent stays in a familiar home setting.

Short-term care at home is often closely connected to respite care because both can give family caregivers relief while an elderly parent receives non-medical support. The National Institute on Aging explains that respite care provides short-term relief for primary caregivers and can take place at home, in an adult day center, or in a care facility. (National Institute on Aging) (National Institute on Aging) For Indianapolis families, Nana Cares provides respite care in Indianapolis for elderly parents who need companionship, supervision, personal care support when appropriate, and help with daily routines.

Where can I find short-term care for an elderly parent at home?

Where find short-term care elderly parent support usually starts with local non-medical home care agencies, respite care providers, hospital discharge planners, case managers, senior resource organizations, or trusted family referrals. If your parent needs help at home but does not need skilled nursing, a non-medical home care agency may be a practical place to start.

Families often look for short-term care when they need:

  • Temporary coverage after a hospital or rehab stay
  • Care while a family caregiver works
  • Help during travel, errands, or appointments
  • Support over a weekend or family event
  • Relief while deciding on a longer-term plan
  • Backup care when the usual caregiver is unavailable
  • Help with companionship, meals, hygiene, mobility, or supervision

A local provider can help explain whether your parent’s needs fit short-term care, respite care, companion support, or personal care. Families who want a broader overview can read short-term care for elderly parents at home and the main in-home respite care guide.

What should I ask a short-term care provider before starting?

The best questions for short-term care provider conversations should focus on safety, scope, scheduling, caregiver matching, and what the agency can realistically provide. Short-term care can move quickly, but families should still understand the details before care begins.

Ask the provider:

  • Are your services non-medical, skilled medical, or both?
  • Can caregivers help with companionship and supervision?
  • Can care include bathing, dressing, toileting, or mobility support?
  • Do you provide medication reminders only, or medication administration?
  • What are your minimum hours per visit or per week?
  • Can you support weekends, evenings, or short-notice needs?
  • How do you match caregivers with clients?
  • How are caregivers screened and trained?
  • What happens if the caregiver is not a good fit?
  • Who does the family call if there is a concern?

The CDC notes that caregiving can include help with critical daily tasks such as grocery shopping, bathing, dressing, managing medicines, emotional support, and companionship. (CDC) (CDC) That is why families should be specific about what their parent needs instead of only asking for “someone to sit with them.”

Can a local agency provide temporary in-home care?

Yes, a temporary in-home care agency can often provide short-term non-medical support when caregiver availability, service area, schedule, and care needs align. Local agencies can be especially helpful because they understand nearby communities, local scheduling needs, and the practical concerns families face when caring for an aging parent at home.

Temporary in-home care may include:

  • Companionship and conversation
  • Supervision while family is away
  • Meal preparation and hydration reminders
  • Light homemaker support tied to care and safety
  • Grooming, dressing, bathing, or toileting support when included in the care plan
  • Mobility support when safe and appropriate
  • Medication reminders, not medication administration
  • Support during a short-term care transition

For example, if an elderly parent is coming home after a hospital stay, the family may need help with meals, light homemaker support, safe routines, and personal care. Nana Cares does not provide skilled nursing or medical treatment, but families can review post-hospital home care to understand non-medical support after discharge.

Families whose parent needs hands-on help can also review personal care services, while families mainly worried about loneliness, supervision, or routine support may want to review companion care.

How do families compare short-term care options for elderly parents?

Short-term care options for elderly parents should be compared based on the parent’s needs, the caregiver’s schedule, the provider’s scope, and how quickly support must begin. The right option is not always the biggest or most expensive plan. It is the one that gives the parent appropriate support and gives the family caregiver real relief.

Compare care options by asking:

  • Does my parent need non-medical support or skilled medical care?
  • Is this for a few days, a few weeks, or ongoing relief?
  • Does my parent need companionship only, or hands-on personal care too?
  • Are evenings, weekends, or overnight hours needed?
  • Can the provider support the service address?
  • Are there minimum hours?
  • Is payment private pay, Medicaid waiver, long-term care insurance, or another source?
  • Is the provider clear about what is not included?

Medicare explains that custodial or personal care, such as help with bathing, dressing, or using the bathroom, is not covered as home health care when that is the only care needed. (Medicare.gov) (Medicare) This is one reason families should understand the difference between non-medical short-term care and skilled home health care before choosing a provider.

Book a Free Short-Term Care Needs Assessment in Indianapolis

If you are trying to find short-term care for an elderly parent at home, Nana Cares can help you understand your options and decide what level of non-medical support may fit your family’s situation.

Nana Cares provides respite care in Indianapolis and related in-home support for elderly parents who need companionship, supervision, routine help, homemaker support tied to care, or personal care assistance when included in the care plan.

Call Nana Cares today at (317) 998-0293 or book a free needs assessment to discuss your parent’s needs, schedule, and next steps.