Loving Hearts of Clovis Home, at 882 Filbert Ave. in Clovis, CA, was a small family owned and operated residential care home for seniors, holding up to six residents in a warm, home-like setting that had suites and both private and semi-private rooms, and you'd find they meant to keep things comfortable and caring for people who needed support with daily living. The place offered board and care services as well as care for conditions like diabetes and incontinence, and if someone needed memory care or Alzheimer's programs, the staff-who included registered nurses with ICU, ER, and hospice experience-were there at all hours, giving individual attention and keeping the community secure so folks with memory issues wouldn't wander off and get confused. The home had help for bathing, dressing, washing, and toileting, plus medication supervision and hygiene, and there were special diets available for things like high blood pressure or diabetes, and every day, residents got three homemade meals, prepared right there in the house.
Residents could use the sauna or health area, hot tub, reading room, and an in-home salon with a traveling stylist stopping by, and there were outdoor spaces to sit or gardens to look at if someone liked to be outside. The staff scheduled things like movie nights, fitness sessions, music and craft programs, and there were group activities such as music therapy, pet therapy, board games, and even community night events or outside trips, and for those folks needing help getting around, transportation for errands, medical visits, and spiritual services was available along with parking. The community had both independent and assisted living services, with care plans shaped to each resident, and skilled nursing was on hand for wound care and health problems that needed a watchful eye all day and night.
The home kept to a small number of residents, which meant about three and a half staff members for every one person living there, so people got to know each other, and everyone could count on a familiar helping hand, and being family-run gave the place a homey feeling. The focus fell on offering not just board and care, but memory care, respite care for short stays, and support with daily things like grooming, reminders for medicine, and getting dressed. The place had standard and special events for residents with Alzheimer's, and while the building itself was close to cafes, pharmacies, parks, doctors, restaurants, churches, theaters, and even three hospitals nearby, the home stayed secure for people needing extra protection, especially those with memory concerns. Loving Hearts of Clovis Home is currently closed, but when it was open, it aimed to give seniors a safe, supportive, and well-staffed place to live.