Skip Navigation

Skip Navigation
Start Content
Long-Term Care Home    |    Steps to Choosing Long-Term Care    |    Types of Long-Term Care    |    Paying For Long-Term Care


Steps to Choosing Long-Term Care

  Steps to Choosing Long-Term Care Resources  
  Right Arrow Overview | Step 1: Assess Your Needs | Step 2: Research Financing and Care Choices 
 | Step 3: Find What Is Right For You | Step 4: Visit Your Available Options 

Long-term care is made up of many different services and may include help with activities of daily living like dressing, bathing, eating, and using the bathroom, as well as help with care most people do themselves like taking medications. Long-term care can take place at home, in senior centers, at community centers, in special retirement or assisted living facilities, or in nursing homes. Someone with a long-term physical illness, a disability, or a memory or thought problem (such as Alzheimer's disease) often needs long-term care.

Choosing long-term care is a very important decision. You should plan and think about long-term care before you need care or before a crisis occurs. Planning ahead allows you the time to talk with your doctor about your health and any problems you may be having. It is also very important to talk with your family about the kind of long-term care services you think you might need someday, how much they would cost, and how you would pay for them. The best time to talk about long-term care is before you need services. This section gives you some steps that may help you choose the type of long-term care that meets your needs.

Page Last Updated: August 3, 2012

Link to top of pageTop of page