Trying to decide whether your parent needs social visits, help with errands, or a higher level of home care can feel like a lot to sort through, especially when family caregiving is already stretched. Companion care for seniors can be a helpful starting point, and families can call Health Link 811 to ask about assessment options. This guide explains what companion care includes, when it fits, and how to start. Here’s what you need to know.
What Is Companion Care for Seniors?
Companion care is non-medical support focused on social connection, conversation, daily routines, errands, light household help, and accompaniment. It is often a good fit when an older adult is still living at home but would benefit from regular visits, practical support, and another person checking in.
This service may be arranged privately, included as part of a broader care plan, or discussed during a public home care assessment when needs affect safety or independence. Alberta Health Services (AHS), the provincial health authority that administers public home care, describes home care services as support for people with medical needs, activities of daily living, nursing services, personal care services, respite services, palliative care, wound care, Self-Managed Care, and living option assessments.
What Happens During a Companion Visit?
A companion caregiver may share conversation, prepare a simple meal, accompany a senior to an appointment, help with groceries, encourage a walk, play cards, or support a familiar routine.
The visit should feel respectful and practical. The goal is not to take over the day, but to make it easier, safer, and more connected.
How Is It Different from Personal Care?
Companion care is not the same as hands-on personal care. Personal care usually means help with bathing, dressing, toileting, grooming, transfers, eating, oral care, or medication support.
If your parent needs regular help with those tasks, companion care alone may not be enough. A broader home care plan, personal care support, or nursing input may be needed.
Where Does It Fit in Home Care?
Companion care sits near the lighter-support end of home care. It often overlaps with homemaking, transportation, and social support, but it does not replace nursing or personal care.
In families with elders, one may hear several terms at once: public home care, private care, Client-Directed Home Care Invoicing (CDHCI), and Self-Managed Care (SMC). CDHCI is an Alberta service delivery option for eligible AHS home care clients who are able and willing to direct their own care, with claims administration managed by Alberta Blue Cross. SMC is a separate Alberta option where eligible clients or legal representatives manage funds and contracted care responsibilities directly.
Why Do Families Consider Companion Care?
Families often start looking at companion care after noticing small changes that do not feel like a medical crisis but still matter. A parent may be eating less, going out less, missing appointments, or sounding lonely on the phone.
For family caregivers, the decision can feel emotional. Professional support may be helpful even when family members are still involved, loving, and doing their best.
Your Parent Is Spending More Time Alone
Spending more time alone can affect mood, routine, motivation, and confidence. Regular companionship can add structure and give your parents something familiar to look forward to.
Canada’s National Seniors Council identifies factors such as living alone, mobility challenges, transportation barriers, health concerns, and caregiver isolation in its report on social isolation and loneliness among older adults.
Errands and Appointments Are Getting Harder
Driving changes, winter weather, mobility concerns, or anxiety about going out can make errands feel bigger than they used to. Companion visits can support grocery trips, pharmacy pickups, and appointment accompaniment.
This can be especially helpful in Calgary and nearby communities where families may be balancing work, children, and travel time across the city.
Daily Routines Are Slipping
Missed meals, unopened mail, forgotten laundry, fewer activities, or a fridge that is not being restocked can be early signs that daily life needs more support.
Companion support may help rebuild routine before the situation turns into a larger safety concern. It also gives families a clearer picture of what is happening between visits.
Family Caregiving Is Harder to Sustain
Many family caregivers reach a point where weekend visits, phone check-ins, and errands are no longer enough. That does not mean the family has failed.
Companion visits can give family members breathing room while keeping them involved in decisions, updates, and the relationship that matters most.
Also Read: Helping Seniors Stay Social as They Age explains practical ways to support social connection, daily engagement, and meaningful routines at home.
Is Companion Care Enough?
Use this quick checklist to decide what question to ask next. It is not a formal assessment, but it can help your family sort companion needs from homemaking, personal care, nursing, or funded program questions.
Companion care may fit when the main concerns are:
- Loneliness or fewer social outings.
- Mild routine gaps, such as fewer walks, missed activities, or less structure in the day.
- Errands, grocery trips, pharmacy pickups, or appointment accompaniment.
- Meal companionship, light reminders, or family check-ins between visits.
Ask about homemaking or personal care when these needs are recurring:
- Laundry, meal preparation, cleaning, or household tasks are becoming difficult to keep up with.
- Bathing, dressing, toileting, transfers, eating, oral care, grooming, or medication assistance are needed regularly.
- AHS home care materials list personal care examples such as bathing, grooming, dressing, toileting, mobilization, eating, oral care, and medication assistance, so these concerns should be discussed as care-plan needs rather than treated as ordinary companion visits.
Request an AHS assessment when:
- Needs affect safety, independence, personal care, medication management, caregiver support, or the ability to remain at home.
- The family is unsure whether public home care, private care, community support, or a mix of options is appropriate.
- AHS explains that home care team members assess needs and create a care plan, and its continuing care guidance says the process starts by dialing 811 or emailing continuingcare@ahs.ca.
Ask about CDHCI when:
- AHS has assessed and approved home care hours.
- The family wants to choose a registered agency from the Alberta Blue Cross vendor list.
- You understand that CDHCI services stay within the maximum number of AHS-approved hours per month.
Ask about SMC when:
- Needs are stable, predictable, longer-term, and suitable for a direct-management arrangement.
- The client or legal representative is willing and able to manage contracts, payment responsibilities, and the risks of hiring care support through a legal agreement with AHS.
How Does Companion Care Work?
Companion care can begin privately, through a provider consultation, or after an AHS assessment if publicly funded home care may be relevant. The process involves several steps, but each one answers a different question.
Step 1: Notice What Support Is Missing
Write down what has changed over the last few weeks or months. Look at meals, errands, appointments, mood, memory, mobility, hygiene, medication reminders, housekeeping, and family caregiver availability.
Small examples help. “Mom missed two appointments this month” is easier to act on than “Mom seems different.”
Step 2: Sort the Level of Need
Social needs may point toward companion care. Practical needs may point toward homemaking, transportation, or meal support. Hands-on needs may require personal care or nursing.
This sorting step helps you ask better questions when you call a provider or speak with AHS.
Step 3: Call Health Link 811 for Assessment
If your parents may need publicly funded home care, call Health Link 811 and ask about the right pathway for a home care assessment. AHS describes 811 as the starting point for speaking with a health professional about help at home, community services, or more structured support.
AHS also explains that people seeking continuing care may be connected with someone who gathers information, answers questions, assigns a case manager, schedules an assessment, or provides community service information. You can review AHS guidance on where to start with continuing care.
Step 4: Ask Whether CDHCI or Private Care Fits
CDHCI is an Alberta option that lets eligible AHS Home and Community Care clients choose a home care agency registered with Alberta Blue Cross. AHS must authorize the approved hours first.
The AHS CDHCI brochure explains that families should choose an agency from the Alberta Blue Cross registered vendor list. For a deeper look at the program’s family decision benefits, see 5 Key Benefits of Client-Directed Home Care Invoicing. Verify current eligibility and covered services with AHS before making a funding decision.
Step 5: Start Visits and Adjust the Plan
Once care begins, track what is working. Look at visit timing, caregiver fit, meal support, outings, family updates, and whether the original concern is improving.
If needs change, ask for a care plan review. A companion care plan may need to shift toward personal care, dementia support, respite care, nursing, or another arrangement.
Pro Tip: Bring a written list of changes to the AHS assessment or provider consultation. Small examples, such as missed meals, unopened mail, or fewer outings, help turn vague concern into a clearer care plan.
Key Benefits of Companion Care for Seniors
Companion care works best when the main need is regular support, not clinical treatment. It can help the senior receiving care and the family members trying to keep daily life steady.
More Social Connection at Home
Regular visits create time for conversation, hobbies, walks, shared meals, music, games, or simple companionship. This can help a senior feel less cut off from daily life.
For families, the value is often knowing that someone is showing up consistently and spending meaningful time with their loved one.
Safer Routines Without Taking Over
Companion support can protect independence by helping with the rhythm of the day. A caregiver may encourage meals, remind someone about an appointment, or notice if something seems different.
The tone matters. Good care respects preferences and helps the senior continue familiar routines.
Practical Help With Errands and Meals
Many families start with errands because they are concrete and easy to name. Groceries, pharmacy trips, walks, appointments, and light meal preparation can make home life easier.
In Calgary, this can be useful when adult children are working across the city or coordinating care from another community.
More Breathing Room for Family Caregivers
Companion visits can make the family caregiving role more sustainable. They can cover predictable visits, social time, outings, or routine support that family members cannot always provide.
This does not replace family involvement. It adds support around the family so care does not rely on one person’s schedule.
Earlier Notice When Needs Change
A regular visitor may notice changes in appetite, mood, memory, mobility, home safety, or energy. These observations can help families respond sooner.
The goal is not to turn every concern into a crisis. It is to catch patterns early enough to adjust support thoughtfully.
What Should You Know Before Choosing Companion Care?
Companion care can be a strong starting point, but it has limits. The most useful question is whether your parent needs social and practical support, hands-on personal care, nursing, or a more structured care plan.
Companion Care Is Non-Medical
Companion care does not replace a Registered Nurse (RN), physician, therapist, or emergency service. An RN is a licensed nursing professional who can assess needs and help create a care plan.
If medication administration, wound care, post-surgical monitoring, or clinical judgment is needed, ask about nursing or AHS assessment options.
Some Needs Require Personal Care
AHS home care materials describe personal care examples such as bathing, grooming, dressing, toileting, mobilization, eating, oral care, and medication assistance. Those needs go beyond ordinary companion visits and should be assessed carefully.
If memory changes, wandering, falls, or unsafe cooking are concerns, ask whether dementia care, personal care, home safety support, or nursing input should be included.
Funding Depends on Assessment
AHS states that to be eligible for a Home and Community Care assessment, a person needs a valid Alberta Health Care insurance plan number. Home and community care helps with activities of daily living that the person cannot do independently or receive help with from another source, especially activities needed to safely maintain independence.
For a broader breakdown of Alberta funding routes, including AHS, CDHCI, SMC, insurance, and private pay, see Who Pays for Home Care in Alberta?. Programs and eligibility may change, so verify current requirements with AHS before making a care or funding decision.
SMC Is a Separate Alberta Option
AHS describes Self-Managed Care as an alternate method of service provision that gives resources to directly pay for and manage personal care and home care support services through a legal agreement.
SMC is not the same as CDHCI. It may fit when care needs are stable, predictable, longer-term, and the client or legal representative can manage contracting responsibilities.
Private Hiring Requires Careful Screening
If you hire privately, ask about background checks, training, references, insurance, backup coverage, transportation, communication, and what happens if the caregiver is sick.
Private care may offer scheduling flexibility, but costs vary by provider, location, service level, visit length, and any extra support needed. Verify current pricing directly with providers and check whether any insurance or benefit plan applies.
Pro Tip: If a provider says companion care will “cover everything,” slow down and ask what happens if your parent later needs bathing support, medication assistance, dementia support, or nursing care.
Companion Care vs. Other Home Care Options
Families often search for companion care first because the concern feels social or practical. That is a good place to begin, but it helps to compare nearby options before choosing a path.
The table below separates service types from funding routes. A service is what the person receives. A funding route is how care may be assessed, arranged, or paid for.
| Option | What it helps with | What it does not cover | Possible funding route | Good fit when |
| Companion care | Conversation, outings, errands, meal companionship, reminders, light support | Nursing, emergency response, and most hands-on personal care | Often, private pay may be part of an assessed care plan if approved | The main concern is isolation, routine, errands, or check-ins |
| Homemaking | Meal preparation, laundry, light housekeeping, groceries | Clinical care and most personal care | Private pay, AHS-assessed support, CDHCI if approved | The home is becoming harder to manage |
| Personal care | Bathing, dressing, grooming, toileting, transfers, eating support | Nursing procedures unless separately authorized | AHS-assessed support, CDHCI if approved, private pay | Hands-on daily support is needed |
| Respite care | Temporary relief for family caregivers | A full replacement for all family care over the long term | AHS-assessed support, CDHCI if approved, private pay | Family caregivers need scheduled relief |
| Dementia care | Routine, cueing, supervision, safety support, familiar activities | Emergency response or secure facility-level supervision | Private pay, AHS assessment, CDHCI if approved | Memory changes affect daily safety or routine |
| Private nursing | Medication administration, wound care, clinical oversight, post-hospital needs | General companionship as the only focus | Private pay, AHS-assessed service where eligible | Clinical care is needed at home |
| AHS public home care | Assessed health, personal care, respite, palliative, wound, or support needs | Services outside the assessed care plan | Publicly funded through Alberta Health Care, where eligible | Needs require formal assessment and can be met safely at home |
| CDHCI-funded provider care | Provider choice within AHS-approved hours | Costs or hours beyond what AHS authorizes | AHS assessment plus registered Alberta Blue Cross agency | AHS approves hours and the family wants provider choice |
| SMC | Directly managing funds and contracted care supports | Agency-managed care without client management duties | AHS agreement if eligible | Needs are stable and the client or representative can manage responsibilities |
| Private-pay care | Flexible scheduling, added visits, services outside public hours | Out-of-pocket unless separate funding, insurance, or benefits apply | Out-of-pocket, insurance, or benefit plan if applicable | The family wants added or immediate support |
When Companion Care Is Enough
Companion care may fit when your parent is mostly safe at home but needs regular social connection, accompaniment, light meal support, errands, or reminders.
It is often a good first layer when the concern is “life is getting too quiet and harder to manage,” not “daily care is unsafe without hands-on help.”
When Another Service May Fit
Another service may be needed when personal hygiene, mobility, memory, medication, nutrition, falls, or caregiver exhaustion are becoming larger concerns.
Public AHS care, CDHCI, SMC, and private care can all play a role. AHS says case managers can work with clients after assessment to consider public, private, community, or mixed options based on assessed needs.
How to Get Started with Companion Care
Starting care is easier when the first step is specific. You do not need to have the whole plan figured out before asking questions.
Step 1: Write Down What Has Changed
Include meals, mood, errands, appointments, memory, mobility, hygiene, medication reminders, home safety, and caregiver availability.
If there has been a fall, hospital discharge, worsening confusion, or a caregiver health concern, include that too.
Step 2: Talk With Your Parent
Ask what kind of support would feel respectful, useful, and not intrusive. Discuss preferred routines, privacy, visit timing, and whether accompaniment would make outings easier.
This conversation matters because good home care should support independence, not remove choice.
Step 3: Call Health Link 811 if Public Care May Fit
Call Health Link 811 and ask about the right process for an AHS home care assessment. AHS says home care team members assess needs and create a care plan.
Have the Alberta Health Care number, medication list, diagnoses if relevant, mobility concerns, recent changes, examples of missed routines, caregiver availability, and questions about funding.
Step 4: Ask About CDHCI or SMC
Ask about CDHCI if AHS approves home care hours and the family wants provider choice through a registered agency.
Ask about SMC if needs are stable, predictable, longer-term, and the client or legal representative can manage care contracts and responsibilities.
Step 5: Compare Provider Fit
Ask what companion visits include, what they do not include, whether caregivers can accompany clients to appointments, how transportation works, and how families receive updates.
Also ask what happens if your parent begins needing personal care, dementia support, nursing, or a different schedule.
Step 6: Review After the First Visits
After the first few visits, review timing, tasks, comfort, communication, and whether more support is needed.
Pro Tip: Before choosing a schedule, identify the hardest part of the week. A well-timed three-hour visit can sometimes solve more than a longer visit at the wrong time.
Also Read: Setting Up In-Home Care for Your Loved One walks through the practical preparation steps families can take before care begins.
How Saigecare Can Help
Saigecare supports Calgary families with companion care that fits around daily routines, familiar preferences, and changing needs. Visits may include conversation, accompaniment, errands, meal support, social activities, light household help, and updates for family members.
As a nurse-led home care agency, Saigecare uses RN care planning to help families understand whether companion care is the right starting point or whether personal care, dementia care, respite care, or private nursing should be discussed. This helps the care plan grow with the client rather than staying fixed when needs change.
Saigecare is also an approved provider under Alberta’s CDHCI program. Families with AHS-approved hours can learn how CDHCI works with Saigecare through the Client-Directed Home Care Invoicing service page, review companion care options, or ask about a free in-home consultation.
Conclusion
Companion care is non-medical support for social connection, errands, routines, and family relief. It can help when a senior is mostly safe at home but needs regular support. This guide covered Alberta access through 811, AHS assessment, CDHCI, SMC, private-pay options, limits, comparisons, and next steps. For Calgary families, companion care can be a practical first step toward steadier support at home and a clearer care plan.
FAQs
What does a companion do for seniors?
A companion supports social connection and everyday routines. Visits may include conversation, shared meals, walks, games, errands, grocery help, appointment accompaniment, and light household support.
A companion does not replace a nurse, doctor, or emergency service. If your parent needs hands-on personal care or medical support, ask about a broader home care assessment.
What is the difference between companion care and personal care?
Companion care focuses on social support, routine, outings, and light practical help. Personal care involves hands-on assistance with bathing, dressing, toileting, grooming, transfers, eating, or medication-related support.
The distinction matters because personal care may require different training, supervision, funding, and care planning.
How much does companion care cost?
Private companion care costs vary by provider, city, visit length, caregiver training, transportation needs, and level of support. Always ask providers for current rates and what is included in the visit.
If publicly funded care may be relevant, call 811 and ask about an AHS home care assessment. Eligibility and approved services are determined through assessment.
Is companion care covered by insurance or public funding?
Coverage depends on the payer, care need, and plan details. Private insurance or benefit plans may cover certain home care services, but families should verify directly with the insurer.
In Alberta, public home care support requires assessment through AHS. CDHCI may apply only when AHS has approved home care hours, and the chosen agency is registered with Alberta Blue Cross.
Can companion care help someone living with dementia?
Companion care may help someone living with early memory changes by supporting routine, conversation, familiar activities, meal cues, and accompaniment. It may not be enough if wandering, unsafe cooking, falls, aggression, or overnight supervision are concerns.
If dementia is affecting safety, ask about dementia care, personal care, respite care, or an AHS assessment.
Related Reads
What Are The Benefits Of Senior Home Care?
A related guide on how home care can support independence, daily routines, family confidence, and staying at home longer.
Home Safety Checklist for Aging in Place
A safety-focused checklist for families reviewing whether a loved one’s home setup still supports daily independence.
Did You Forget About Yourself?
A caregiving support article for family members who are coordinating care while also trying to protect their own health and energy.


