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Professional Aging Care Management Services

A professional care manager is your family’s aging advocate — helping you navigate medical, emotional, financial, and care decisions with expert guidance and compassionate support. At Aging Care Matters, we provide professional aging life care and geriatric care management services for older adults and families throughout Raleigh, Durham, Chapel Hill, and Wake Forest, NC.

Families often contact us when they feel overwhelmed, exhausted, uncertain, or suddenly thrown into a crisis involving an aging parent, spouse, or loved one.

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Problems We Help Families Solve

  1. Crisis Situations – A sudden hospitalization, fall, memory concern, or unsafe situation can throw families into panic overnight. We help families quickly assess options, stabilize the situation, and create a safe, realistic plan moving forward.
  2. Care Coordination – Many older adults see multiple doctors, specialists, therapists, and service providers — often with little communication between them. We help coordinate care, organize information, attend appointments when needed, and ensure everyone is working toward the same goals.
  3. Family Communication Challenges – Adult siblings may disagree, parents may resist help, and caregivers often feel unheard or overwhelmed. We help families navigate difficult conversations, reduce confusion, and create clearer communication and direction.
  4. Decision-Making & Capacity Concerns – Families often struggle with questions about safety, memory loss, driving, finances, or whether a loved one can continue living independently. We help assess concerns, identify risks, and guide families through difficult care and planning decisions.
  5. Caregiver & Family Conflict – Caregiving can place enormous emotional strain on families, marriages, and sibling relationships. We provide calm, experienced guidance during stressful situations while helping families move from conflict and guilt toward practical solutions and support.

Who Is Care Management For?

A care manager becomes the experienced, knowledgeable guide families wish they had from the very beginning.

Whether your loved one is beginning to show memory loss, resisting help, returning home from the hospital, living alone, or needing more support, our team helps families move from crisis and confusion toward clarity, direction, and solutions.

  1. Adult Children of Aging Parents – For sons and daughters trying to balance caregiving with work, parenting, and their own lives, while worrying about an aging parent’s safety and well-being.
  2. Long-Distance Caregivers – For families living out of town who need trusted local oversight, advocacy, updates, and eyes on the situation.
  3. Only Children Carrying the Responsibility Alone – For caregivers without siblings or nearby family to share the emotional, logistical, and decision-making burden.
  4. Blended Families or Families Experiencing Conflict – For situations where siblings, spouses, or family members disagree about care decisions, finances, safety, or next steps.
  5. Professionals Supporting Older Adults – For attorneys, financial planners, fiduciaries, and other professionals who need an experienced aging care partner to help clients navigate healthcare, safety, housing, and caregiving concerns.

Our Care Management Services

Initial Care Assessment

We evaluate medical concerns, cognition, safety, daily functioning, caregiving stress, and available resources, and provide clear recommendations and next steps.

Monthly Care Management Programs

We help coordinate care, monitor concerns, communicate with providers, support caregivers, and proactively address problems before they become crises.

Crisis & Hospital Transition Support

We help families navigate discharge planning, coordinate services, reduce confusion, and create safer, smoother transitions home or into the next level of care.

Long-Distance Caregiver Support

We become your eyes, ears, advocate, and support system on the ground while keeping families informed about changes, concerns, appointments, and care needs.

Collaborative Support With Trusted Professionals

Aging care decisions often involve medical, legal, financial, and emotional complexities. At Aging Care Matters, we work collaboratively with elder law attorneys, financial planners, physicians, therapists, home health providers, and other professionals to help families create coordinated, informed care plans.

Our role is often to help connect the pieces — ensuring important information is communicated, recommendations are understood, and care decisions align with the older adult’s needs, safety, goals, and available resources.

Families and professionals alike value having an experienced aging care advocate helping oversee the bigger picture while reducing confusion, gaps in communication, and caregiver overwhelm.

Geriatric Care Manager Working Together

How Much Does Care Management Cost?

We believe families deserve honest, transparent information about cost before making decisions.

Your initial 30-minute consultation is free and gives families an opportunity to discuss concerns, ask questions, and better understand whether care management would be helpful.

After the consultation, services are billed only for the actual time worked. This may include assessments, phone calls, care coordination, medical advocacy, family meetings, research, attending appointments, crisis intervention, documentation, and communication with providers or family members.

Because every family situation is different, costs vary based on complexity and level of involvement. For many families, an average care management engagement ranges between approximately $300–$600, while more complex or ongoing situations may require additional support.

Some families need only short-term guidance and direction. Others benefit from ongoing oversight and advocacy as needs change over time.

Our goal is always to provide meaningful value, practical solutions, and peace of mind while helping families avoid costly mistakes, unnecessary crises, and caregiver burnout.

Care Management Family Stories

Family Stories That Reflect Why We Do This Work

A Note From Carla, Our Owner and Founder

You do not have to have everything figured out before reaching out.

Our free 30-minute consultation gives families an opportunity to talk through concerns, ask questions, and better understand what support options may help — with absolutely no obligation or pressure.

Sometimes one conversation brings more clarity and relief than families have felt in months.

Whether you are facing a crisis, noticing subtle changes, feeling overwhelmed as a caregiver, or simply unsure what steps to take next, we are here to help you determine whether care management is the right fit for your family.

Call 919-525-6464 or schedule your consultation today.

Frequently Asked Questions About Care Management

How is a care manager different from a home health aide?

A home health aide provides hands-on assistance with daily care needs such as bathing, dressing, meals, or companionship. A care manager oversees the bigger picture — helping families assess needs, coordinate care, advocate medically, solve problems, navigate crises, and make informed decisions.

Does Medicare cover care management services?

In most cases, traditional Medicare does not cover private geriatric care management services. Families typically pay privately because care management provides personalized advocacy, oversight, coordination, and support that go beyond what insurance-based systems usually offer.

Can you help if I live out of state?

Yes. Many of our clients are long-distance caregivers trying to manage concerns for parents or loved ones in North Carolina. We provide local oversight, communication, appointment support, updates, advocacy, and peace of mind for families who cannot be nearby regularly.

Do you work with my parent’s existing doctors and providers?

Absolutely. We often work collaboratively with physicians, specialists, therapists, hospitals, home health agencies, elder law attorneys, financial planners, and other professionals to help families create coordinated, informed care plans.

How quickly can services begin?

In urgent situations, we can often begin consultations and initial support very quickly. Following the initial call, we work with families to prioritize immediate concerns, schedule assessments, and develop next steps based on the urgency of the situation.

Do you only help families dealing with dementia?

No. While many families contact us regarding memory loss or dementia concerns, we also help with medical crises, caregiving overwhelm, safety concerns, chronic illness, hospital transitions, aging alone, family conflict, and long-term care planning.

At what point should a family contact a care manager?

Most families tell us they wish they had called sooner. Care management can be helpful long before a crisis occurs — especially when families begin noticing changes in memory, safety, health, caregiving stress, or increasing difficulty managing daily life independently.