Domiciliary Care
Domiciliary care is the range of services put in place to support an individual in their own home, and is available to those that require additional support with day to day household tasks, personal care or any other activity that allows them to maintain their quality of life and independent living at Home.
We provide ongoing support that’s tailored around your needs and routines.
Many families are opting for domiciliary care – otherwise known as care at home – because it puts them back in control of the support they receive. With one-to-one personal attention, from 30 minutes a week and up to several visits a day or overnight support, our care plans are completely built around you.
Call us today to find out more about our domiciliary care services. As the nation’s only home care provider that is thriving for Excellence, MEE@HOME will carefully match you with someone who is skilfully trained, compassionate and who fits your personality and interests, closely supervised by our expert management team 24/7
Personal Care
Illness, age or infirmity can make it difficult to carry out all of the personal care tasks that you once handled with ease. Personal Care is the most difficult one to accept, not only can this be frustrating, but also embarrassing.
MEE@HOME Care’s professionalism and support will help you accept it with dignity and respect. In light of this, we offer support with dressing, feeding, washing and toileting, bathing, shaving, oral care, getting in or out of bed, eating, drinking, taking medication and communicating in the comfort of your home. We also provide advice, encouragement, emotional and psychological support when required.
Brain Injury
Brain injury can be either an acquired brain injury (ABI) or traumatic brain injury (TBI). ABIs are caused by a medical condition such as a stroke or brain tumour, while a TBI is the result of physical trauma, such as an injury.
The complex nature of the brain means that people with ABI or TBI can experience a wide range of physical, mental and emotional symptoms, which can create challenges for themselves and the people closest to them.
MEE@HOME Care, as a brain injury care agency, we understand that no two brain injuries are the same, so we create a bespoke complex care package tailored to the client’s injury, their symptoms and lifestyle, to deliver the right care, in the right way. We work closely with the client and their family to select trained and qualified care staff to support them, experienced in dealing with the challenges, including behaviours and mobility, which the brain injury may bring.
Alongside high quality acquired or traumatic brain injury care in the home, our ABI and TBI care packages are designed to support each client in achieving maximum independence and quality of life, by providing support for personal care, mobility needs, socialising, education, work, travel, hobbies and interests.
In selecting staff for our acquired or traumatic brain injury clients, we recruit those experienced in ABI and TBI issues to ensure they have the skills and knowledge to work as part of a brain injury care agency, providing the right support for any emotional or behavioural changes caused by the brain injury.
For a free, no-obligation discussion about our brain injury care agency work, and delivering complex care in the home in the UK for spinal cord injury, long-term ventilation, cerebral palsy, multiple sclerosis, muscular dystrophy and other neurological conditions call
Live-in Care
Our support workers are able to provide full-time, 24 hour care services for the elderly in the familiar surroundings of their home.
Carers Break or Respite Care
Caring for carers is our top priority
Taking a break from caring, our trained dedicated carers take care of your loved ones in their own home while the regular carer takes some time to look after themselves. Caring for a loved one should not stop you from living your own life.
Our Respite care packages range from just a few hours sit in to an overnight stay while the carer is taking care of themselves.
- Giving a regular carer a break:
- After an accident: early hospital discharge:
- recovering from surgery