January 27, 2026 min
59 min
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In this episode of the Able to Care Podcast, Andy sits down with Gary to unpack a question families often ask in a moment of stress: “What actually is live-in care?”
Gary explains live-in care in simple, human terms – a trained carer moves into a spare room and supports your loved one day-to-day with personal care, medication support, routines, and companionship. It’s not just “doing tasks” – it’s helping someone keep living life on their terms, in familiar surroundings, with dignity and less anxiety.
Gary lays out the real-world differences: domiciliary care can be time-pressured and task-focused, while residential care may mean giving up independence and adapting to an institution’s routine. Live-in care sits in the middle – it offers support and safety, while keeping the person at home with more continuity and choice.
A big theme is prevention – noticing the small things early (hydration, mobility changes, anxiety creeping in, medication errors) before they become big crises like falls, hospital admissions, or rapid deterioration. Live-in care can reduce risk because someone is there day after day – not just popping in for a short visit.
For people living with dementia, home can be more than a building – it’s memory cues, identity, routine, pets, and safety signals. Gary talks about how familiar surroundings can reduce distress and support calmer behaviour, while still managing risk safely.
Andy names what many carers think but don’t always admit: letting someone move in can feel intrusive. Gary explains how matching works, why continuity matters, and how a rotating team model can reduce dependency while still building trust and stability.
Families often assume live-in care must be more expensive than a care home – but Gary explains that the gap has narrowed, and depending on support needs, it can be comparable. He also points to practical funding routes such as direct payments, and encourages families to ask professionals directly: “What are my choices?”
If you’re carrying the weight of caregiving right now, this episode gently challenges the all-or-nothing thinking that traps so many families: it doesn’t have to be “cope alone” or “move them into a care home tomorrow”. Live-in care may be the breathing space that keeps everyone safer – including you.
And if nothing else, let this land: asking for support isn’t failing. It might be the most protective choice you can make – for your loved one and for your own mental health.