Katie's Adult Family Home in Lakewood, WA, is a small board and care home for up to six residents and sits in a quiet spot surrounded by a peaceful yard, and the place tries to keep everything as home-like and calm as possible for its residents, whether they're there for assisted living, memory care, hospice, or taking a short respite stay while a caregiver gets a break. Staff here have training to help seniors with dementia or Alzheimer's, and the care goes beyond just basic help with bathing, dressing, and taking medicine; the team creates personalized care plans to make sure everyone's individual needs are met, from help with incontinence and high-acuity medical issues to specialty diets for hypertension, diabetes, kosher, and vegetarian preferences. The home offers private rooms with bathrooms, safety features like wheelchair-accessible showers and tubs, and each room gets a good amount of natural light, which makes it feel more comfortable for anyone living there, and the staff stays available around the clock.
Meals come served fresh each day and can be adjusted for dietary needs, including multi-ethnic dishes, and there's always some kind of activity happening, whether it's music therapy, crafts, movie nights, group exercises, outdoor relaxation, or trips offsite to shop, attend religious services, or go for a picnic. The community pays special attention to spiritual and emotional wellbeing by arranging onsite and offsite devotional services. There's a reading room, walled yard areas, a wellness spa, a beauty salon, and even a mobile hairdresser that comes so residents can feel their best. Social time is always encouraged, with plenty of structured activities and occasional barbecues to help people feel connected even as their needs increase. The home's designed to be inviting and warm for people with disabilities, former veterans, or seniors who find living alone unsafe but don't need the higher level of a nursing home, and the owner herself is the spouse of a veteran, which adds a bit of personal understanding to how military folks get treated here. Transportation runs for appointments or errands, and parking is available for those who still drive or have family visiting. In the end, the idea is to create a familiar environment where care covers physical, medical, and spiritual support, and staff aim to keep everyone as independent and comfortable as possible, all while keeping individual needs front and center.