Most seniors want to stay home — but the system supporting them is fragmented and unaccountable. Families relying on trust they can't verify are left exposed to risks that go unnoticed until it's too late.
Each one is small at first — easy to miss, easy to rationalize. Left unwatched, any of them can quietly become the event that ends independence.
People entering the home without proper background checks, credentials, or verification — putting your loved one at serious risk.
Unauthorized access, overcharging, or manipulation that leads to real financial loss and erodes a senior's security.
Invoices that quietly climb month over month, with charges that no longer match the care actually being delivered.
A loose handrail, poor lighting, or a deferred repair that turns into a fall, an injury, or a costly emergency.
Caregiver visits that slip — arriving late or not at all — with no one watching the full picture to notice the pattern.
Families, especially from a distance, left guessing — without structure, visibility, or a single source of truth.
Care lives with the agency. Repairs live with whoever showed up last. Bills live in a drawer. Each provider sees only their slice — and no one is accountable for how it all fits together.
So problems don't announce themselves. They surface as a surprise invoice, a fall, a frantic phone call from three states away. By then, the cost — financial and emotional — is already paid.
One independent layer watching care, home, and billing together — catching the small problems before they become the costly ones.