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Our Home Care Services

Assisting Hands® Home Care in Batavia offers our clients personalized non-medical home health care services; Our caregivers provide home care assistance to the elderly, disabled or other clients who have special needs, such as Alzheimer/Dementia care, Parkinson’s Care etc. We can customize our in home care services to fit your schedule and your needs, whether you need a few hours of care per day or round the clock care. Give us a call for free consultation on respite care, overnight care, 24 hour care and live-in care.
Our Serving Areas

Our home care services are available throughout the following areas: Aurora, Bartlett, Batavia, Big Rock, Bloomingdale, Carol Stream, Elburn, Geneva, Hanover Park,Maple Park, Mooseheart, North Aurora, Roselle, St. Charles, Streamwood, Sugar Grove, Wayne, West Chicago, Winfield
Our Mission

At Assisting Hands Home Care, our mission is to offer our clients the very finest personalized non-medical home health care, allowing them to live safely and comfortably in their own homes. Living independently at home is more difficult for seniors with Dementia/Alzheimer/Parkinson or someone with illness or disability. At Assisting Hands Home Care, we understand and send our most caring caregivers to your home.
Short and Long Term Respite Care

Family caregivers can help improve their mental and physical well-being by taking regular time off from caregiving. Assisting Hands Home Care provides respite care services to help relieve family caregivers who care for their elderly relatives. We will help schedule a regular time to take over for the family caregiver and send one of our highly qualified caregivers to resume care in their absence. This arrangement will allow your family caregiver to have scheduled time off that they can use to rest, catch up on work, and spend time with their immediate families.
Recent Blogs

Honoring Nurses During Nurses Week at The Bardwell Residences
At Assisting Hands Home Care Batavia, we were proud to participate in Nurses Week celebrations at The Bardwell Residences to recognize and thank the hardworking nursing staff for their dedication to senior care. As part of the celebration, our team provided lunch catered from Jimmy John’s as a way to show appreciation for the compassion, commitment, and daily support these…
When Should I Be Worried About a Nosebleed in the Elderly?
Reviews from Our Clients


I think they were polite, and they knew what to do. They did the things that I wasn't able to do when I first got home from rehab.

The owner at Assisting Hands does everything she can to provide the service and meet our needs. They have made life easier for my husband who is severely handicapped. We have had great caregivers who can communicate with my husband and take care of his needs.

They were here when they were expected and very careful about the care they were doing. They were preparing one meal a day for me. They also assisted me on the stairway.

I think it’s just the people that I have. I have two different caregivers and they are just really good, so I like the quality of them. If one is sick, I don’t have to worry about it because I know they’ll find someone to take over the case. I am able to work and run errands. They’ve also helped with my loved one’s exercises, so they are very dedicated to doing those with him.
My mother has dementia and refuses help from strangers. How do you handle that?
We have been in that living room many times. What does not work is showing up and immediately trying to “do care”. Our caregivers know how to come in quietly, sit at the kitchen table, have a conversation, and not make it feel clinical or threatening. Some clients take a few visits to warm up, and some take a little longer. We do not rush it and we do not take refusal personally. Most families are surprised because within a week or two mom is asking when her caregiver is coming back.
My dad already gets meals through a local senior program. Does home care work alongside that?
Completely. We work around whatever she already has going whether that is meal deliveries, senior center days, or volunteer visitors. We are not here to replace what is already working for her. We fill in the hours where she needs someone present and step back when she does not. Her routine stays hers.
Is there a minimum number of hours required per visit?
We typically ask for a minimum of two to three hours per visit. It takes real time to provide proper care including getting someone up, bathed, fed, and settled and very short visits do not give a caregiver enough time to do any of it well.
What happens if our regular caregiver calls in sick?
We call you the same day as early as possible. We do not leave you finding out at 8am when no one shows up. We keep a group of caregivers who are familiar with covering situations like this, and we treat your family's schedule like it matters because it does. This is especially important for clients who need care every single day and cannot afford a gap in coverage.
How do I know if my parent needs home care or if I am overreacting?
Most families call us later than they should have. If you are asking the question, something has already changed whether that is a fall, a close call, a meal that did not get made, or a medication that got missed. You do not need to wait for a crisis to reach out. A free consultation costs nothing, and we will tell you honestly whether what we are seeing warrants regular care or whether your parent is doing fine for now.
Can Assisting Hands help after a hospital stay or surgery in the Batavia area?
Yes. Post-hospital and post-surgical care is one of the most common reasons families contact us. After a procedure, many patients need help with bathing, meals, mobility, and medication reminders — but don't qualify for continued skilled nursing at home. Our caregivers step in to bridge that gap, helping your loved one recover safely at home and reducing the risk of being readmitted to the hospital.
What is the difference between non-medical home care and home health care?
Non-medical home care is what we provide at Assisting Hands in Batavia. Our caregivers help with the everyday things that become difficult as someone ages or recovers from an illness. Getting dressed in the morning, preparing meals, bathing safely, getting to appointments, having someone present so a family member is not alone all day. It is not clinical care but for most families it is the care that makes everything else possible.
Home health care is different. That involves a licensed nurse or therapist coming to the home to perform medical services like wound care, physical therapy, occupational therapy, or managing IV medications. Home health is typically ordered by a doctor after a hospital stay and is usually covered by Medicare for a limited period.
Home Care Services or Jobs?






