Aging care decisions rarely involve just one person or one professional. Families are often trying to coordinate communication between physicians, specialists, hospitals, elder law attorneys, financial planners, therapists, home care providers, and multiple family members — all while navigating emotional stress and changing needs. This page is for: At Aging Care Matters, we help connect the pieces so families are not left trying to manage complex situations alone. One of the most common breakdowns we see is that each professional may understand their own area well — legal, medical, financial, or care-related — but no one is overseeing how all the moving parts affect daily life, safety, caregiving realities, cognitive changes, and the family’s actual ability to implement the recommendations being made. Our role is often to bridge those gaps, improve communication, and help create realistic, coordinated plans families can actually carry out. Many families already have good professionals involved: The problem is that these professionals often work in separate silos. Each may be appropriately focused on their own area of expertise, but there is rarely a single person coordinating communication across all the moving parts. As a result, families become the messenger between medical providers, legal advisors, financial professionals, caregivers, and facilities — often while already exhausted and overwhelmed. This is where important details can fall through the cracks: At Aging Care Matters, we help bridge these gaps by improving communication, coordinating information, and helping ensure the family’s real-world situation remains at the center of decision-making. Aging care and legal planning often overlap closely, especially as health, cognition, safety, and decision-making abilities change over time. We frequently collaborate with elder law attorneys to help families navigate these transitions more smoothly and proactively. Common coordination areas include: We help families identify when legal planning documents may need attention and can provide ongoing observations and care documentation that help support evolving care and decision-making needs. When questions arise regarding a loved one’s ability to safely manage finances, healthcare decisions, or legal matters, we help coordinate appropriate medical or cognitive evaluations when formal capacity assessments are needed. When families are exploring Medicaid planning or long-term care options, we help provide practical documentation related to care needs, daily functioning, supervision requirements, and caregiving realities while the elder law attorney handles the legal and financial planning structure. Our role is not to provide legal advice, but rather to help ensure attorneys and families have a clearer understanding of the older adult’s real-world care needs, risks, and functional situation. Aging care decisions often have major financial implications, especially as care needs increase over time. We frequently collaborate with financial planners and CPAs to help families make more informed, realistic care and budgeting decisions. Common coordination areas include: We help families and advisors understand the likely costs of care over time — including home care, adult day care, assisted living, memory care, and skilled nursing — so financial plans can better align with real-world caregiving needs and progression. The timing of care decisions can significantly affect long-term financial stability. We help families evaluate practical care options and levels of support while financial professionals guide asset preservation strategies, spend-down planning, and broader financial decision-making. Families often have questions regarding medical-expense deductions, caregiving-related tax considerations, dependency claims, or eligible care expenses. We help provide care-related documentation and practical insight while CPAs and tax professionals advise families regarding tax strategy and eligibility. Our role is to help financial professionals better understand the functional, cognitive, caregiving, and safety realities influencing care decisions — not just the financial numbers alone. Older adults often see multiple physicians and specialists, yet important information can easily become fragmented between appointments, hospital systems, caregivers, and family members. We help improve communication and coordination so medical recommendations are more realistic, informed, and easier for families to implement. Common coordination areas include: We may attend appointments, help families organize concerns and questions beforehand, and provide physicians with important observations regarding cognition, safety, caregiving challenges, functional decline, or changes occurring at home between visits. When multiple physicians prescribe medications, confusion and overlap can occur. We help families organize medication information, identify possible concerns or inconsistencies, and communicate observations back to the healthcare team for review. We help families advocate for referrals when additional evaluations, therapies, specialists, home health, rehabilitation, palliative care, hospice, or cognitive assessments may be appropriate based on changing needs. Our role is not to replace the primary physician or medical team. Our role is to help ensure medical guidance is better coordinated, better understood, and more realistically integrated into the older adult’s daily life and caregiving situation. Many families know they need additional help at home but feel overwhelmed trying to determine which agency is the right fit and whether services are actually meeting their loved one’s needs over time. We help families through: We help families evaluate options for home health, private-duty caregiving, therapy services, and in-home support based on care needs, personality fit, scheduling, supervision needs, location, and budget considerations. Once services begin, we help monitor how well the care plan is actually working in real life. This may include identifying concerns related to aide turnover, communication breakdowns, changing care needs, scheduling inconsistencies, or gaps between the recommended care plan and what is occurring day to day. It is important to understand that Aging Care Matters does not provide hands-on personal care such as bathing, dressing, toileting, or direct caregiving assistance. Those services are provided by licensed home health or in-home care agencies. Our role is oversight, coordination, advocacy, and helping ensure the overall care plan remains appropriate, safe, and effective. Attorneys, financial planners, physicians, fiduciaries, therapists, discharge planners, and other professionals often recognize when a client or patient needs more aging-care support than the family can realistically coordinate alone. Aging Care Matters provides professional care management services throughout the Triangle to help families navigate: When a referral is made: Our role is often to bridge the gap between professional recommendations and the family’s day-to-day ability to safely carry them out. We value collaborative, respectful professional relationships and work to make the lives of both families and referring professionals easier, more organized, and better supported. You should not have to spend your life updating every doctor, specialist, caregiver, attorney, sibling, and provider separately. We help organize communication so your family is not carrying the entire coordination burden alone. Families are often shocked by how easily important details get missed — medication changes, worsening memory, fall risks, caregiver burnout, missed follow-up appointments, or unsafe living situations. We help monitor the bigger picture so concerns are recognized earlier before they become larger crises. When a hospitalization, fall, or major change happens, families without a coordinated plan often feel panicked and overwhelmed. Families already working with a care manager usually have clearer information, trusted guidance, and a professional who already knows the situation and can help quickly. Many families contact us after months — sometimes years — of trying to manage everything themselves. By the time they reach out, they are exhausted from juggling medical appointments, family disagreements, safety concerns, paperwork, crises, and constant worry while feeling like no one is truly overseeing the whole picture. You do not need to start over or rebuild your support system. We are here to work alongside the trusted professionals already helping your family. Often, a single 30-minute conversation between the family, Aging Care Matters, and involved professionals can quickly improve communication, clarify concerns, and help everyone move forward with a more coordinated plan. Our goal is simple: help ensure the medical, caregiving, legal, financial, and real-life pieces of aging care are all working together — not separately. Call 919-525-6464 to schedule a consultation and help get everyone on the same page.
Working Alongside Your Loved One’s Other Professionals


The “Siloed Professionals” Problem
How We Work With Elder Law Attorneys
Power of Attorney & Ongoing Documentation
Capacity Concerns & Evaluations
Medicaid & Long-Term Care Planning Support


How We Work With Financial Planners & CPAs
Care Budgeting & Cost Planning
Asset Preservation & Timing of Care Decisions
Tax-Related Care Considerations
How We Work With Physicians & Specialists
Appointment Support & Medical History Sharing
Medication Reconciliation Across Providers
Advocacy for Appropriate Referrals & Support


How We Work With Home Health & In-Home Care Agencies
Selecting & Coordinating Appropriate Care Agencies
Ongoing Oversight & Quality Monitoring
For Referring Professionals
How Referrals Work


What Better Coordination Means for Your Family
Less Stress Repeating the Same Story Over & Over
Fewer “How Did Nobody Catch This?” Moments
Faster Decisions When Things Suddenly Change
A Note From Carla, Our Owner and Founder
