Relationship-led and supportive Dementia Care in Findon Valley from compassionate and experienced home care professionals.
Highest regulatory ratings
16,000+ active clients
Recommended by 95% of our clients
10,000+ carers nationwide
Home Care rating 9.6
Highest regulatory ratings
16,000+ active clients
Recommended by 95% of our clients
10,000+ carers nationwide
Home Care rating 9.6
Dementia affects over 4,600 people across the Worthing area, including many families in Findon Valley. It brings a range of challenges, from memory loss to emotional strain. At Home Instead Worthing & Steyning, we specialise in providing personalised dementia care that enables individuals to stay safe, supported, and comfortable in their own homes. Backed by a Good CQC rating and over 80 years of combined experience, our local team offers compassionate, reliable support tailored to each person’s journey. From daily routines to emotional reassurance, we help families face dementia with confidence and care.
Get in touch today to
see how we can help
Home Instead Worthing & Steyning provides dementia care that supports familiarity, routine, and reassurance—vital for families in Findon Valley. Our Care Professionals receive specialist dementia training and are matched to clients to build trust and consistency. As needs evolve, care plans are regularly reviewed and adapted, from early-stage support to more complex personal care. Whether it’s help around the home or emotional companionship, we offer flexible visits and dependable care that changes with you. With a dedicated local team and deep community ties, we’re here to deliver support that feels truly personal.
We offer two types of home care: hourly care, where we visit at set times, or live-in care, where a carer resides in the home. Both are overseen by our care management team and delivered by compassionate Care Professionals. Each care package is made up of of a unique mix services to meet your needs.
Companionship care
We carefully match Care Professionals with clients to ensure a meaningful bond is created.
Home help & meal prep
Keeping the home environment clean, safe, and nourishing with home-cooked meals.
Personal care
Assistance with bathing, dressing, and personal hygiene, always respecting the dignity of your loved one.
Mobility support
Helping your loved one move around their home safely, including transfers and positioning.
Health appointment management
We support you to attend those important health appointments.
Community engagement
We enable you to continue to do the things you enjoy, be it a visit to the garden centre or your local art group.
Transportation
Assistance getting you from A to B, whether it be to go visit a friend or help with your shopping.
Medication management
Ensuring medicines are taken correctly and on time, supporting overall health.
At Home Instead Worthing & Steyning, we build dementia care plans around each person’s unique needs—whether that’s medication reminders, personal care, mobility support, or help with housekeeping. Our Care Professionals provide familiar, friendly assistance, including accompanying clients to appointments at Cissbury Medical Group – Lime Tree Surgery or helping with errands around Findon Road. We encourage meaningful routines—whether enjoying a gentle walk through Findon Valley Parade or a coffee at Dee Dee’s Café—keeping clients engaged and connected to the local community they know and love.
Get in touch today to
see how we can help
At Home Instead Worthing & Steyning, our Findon Valley team is made up of kind, dedicated professionals who truly care about supporting people living with dementia. With decades of combined experience and specialist dementia training, our Care Professionals provide personalised, respectful care tailored to each client. We take time to carefully match carers with clients, building trusting relationships that promote familiarity and consistency. Whether assisting someone in central Findon Valley or nearby neighbourhoods, our team is united by a shared mission: helping older adults live safely, comfortably, and confidently at home.
In Findon Valley, we’re committed to supporting older adults through community engagement and dementia awareness. Our team hosts Dementia Friends sessions and plans future talks at local venues to support families navigating memory loss. The Findon Valley Free Church regularly hosts community coffee mornings, social clubs, and events that encourage social connection and inclusion. Whether providing practical advice, supporting carers, or helping clients enjoy familiar routines, we’re proud to be part of the Findon Valley community—helping older adults stay connected, informed, and valued.
FAQs
Our office provides care for people at home in the following areas:
Worthing, Lancing, Durrington, West Worthing, Broadwater, Salvington, Sompting, Steyning, Findon Valley, Upper Beeding, North Lancing, Findon, Wiston, Coombes, Ashurst, Bines Green, Botolphs, Bramber, Nepcote
If your town doesn’t appear above please check the postcodes below to see if we cover your area:
BN14 9, BN15 0, BN44 3, BN13 1, BN11 2, BN11 4, BN11 5, BN15 8, BN14 7, BN13 2, BN11 3, BN14 8, BN15 9, BN11 1, BN14 0
Home Instead Worthing & Steyning is one of 250 locally owned offices that collectively form Home Instead UK. Together, we care for 16,000 clients, delivering one million hours of home care each month. This unique combination of community-focused local offices and the resources of a national network enables us to provide personalised, relationship-led care while leading research and innovation that is transforming the experience of aging. Our services include companionship care, personal care, specialist care (including dementia, palliative, and Parkinson’s), and live-in care.
With the right care and support, a person living with dementia can be as independent as possible. Dementia home care can enable them to live happily and securely in their own home, in familiar surroundings, surrounded by people they know.
Yes. We understand how difficult it can be caring for someone living with dementia but we have years of experience in helping families cope with the situation at home. Our City & Guilds Assured dementia training programme ensures that our Care Professionals are fully equipped to provide exceptional care for individuals living with all types of dementia.
Alzheimer’s disease is the most common type of dementia, followed by Vascular dementia and then Lewy body dementia.
When someone is diagnosed with dementia, it is often assumed that keeping their beloved pet is impossible. This is not necessarily the case. Studies have shown that pets have actually been known to increase the health of those with dementia while providing them with a friend to spend their time with. Owning a cute and cuddly companion can even be an essential part of their daily routine. Before jumping to any conclusions, it may be beneficial to review all of your options when it comes to this important decision.
An unexpected diagnosis can be frightening or difficult, and some might discover that they want their pet to remain by their side. After considering the following factors, you may find that there are other alternatives to immediately giving up a best friend.
For people living with dementia and Alzheimer’s, lack of stimulation and boredom can be one of the most frustrating things. It’s important to provide activities that engage and bring pleasure to people living with Alzheimer’s and dementia.
Stimulating activities can help keep them in high spirits and prevent them from developing depression, whilst lessening anxiety and irritability.
Activities should aim to:
If you have a relative with dementia – perhaps you are their carer – you may be aware that at some point you might find yourself dealing with aggressive behaviour from them. This is a prospect that many people fear, but there are ways to cope with such challenging behaviours.
The early stages of dementia are not always obvious, and symptoms and problems might develop slowly. To add to these difficulties, early signs of Alzheimer’s and dementia are frequently easy to dismiss as a normal sign of ageing. However, if you know what to look out for, you can keep an eye on yourself and your loved ones and identify symptoms early. This will allow you to get the medical advice early on and work out care ahead of time.
For a person with dementia, Christmas poses challenges that include disruption to a routine, confusing changes to décor and the layout of a home, and the pressure to be social over extended periods of time. When somebody’s memory or cognitive skills are deteriorating, they will find these tasks especially difficult; it is important that they are catered for in the most sensitive ways possible.
By looking at each potential challenge in turn, we have suggested some ways to manage these difficulties and have a successful Christmas without causing your loved one with dementia distress or exacerbating their confusion.
There are many types of dementia. Alzheimer’s disease is simply one form of dementia.
Dr. Alois Alzheimer is credited with discovering Alzheimer’s disease. Dr. Alzheimer was a well-known and popular German physician and researcher working in the early 1900s. Physicians and scientists at the time had a fascination with the human brain and were studying it to better understand how it worked.
Dr. Alzheimer met Auguste Deter, the first person who was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s. Auguste told Dr. Alzheimer, “I have forgotten myself”. He brought her to the doctor when she started to have memory loss and delusions. Dr. Alzheimer studied her for several years, noting her decline.
Because of Dr. Alzheimer’s discovery, the disease was named after him.
Certainly. We know how challenging it can be caring for someone living with Alzheimer’s disease, however we have years of experience in helping families cope with the situation at home. Our City & Guilds Assured dementia training programme means our Care Professionals are trained to care for people living with all the different types of dementia.
Enable your loved ones to continue to live their life with the support of the Worthing & Steyning team. If you would like more information about our high quality Dementia Care service, please call us on 01903 251484, or fill out the form below.