Learn More About Partners in Care

Independence, Acceptance, Safety, Person Centered Approach – These are all critical to caring for developmentally disabled adults. 

Independence

Our goal is to provide services and supports that will enable each individual to be as independent as they are able to be.

Partners in Care will assist each individual in learning the skills they need to make this happen.

Acceptance

Partners in Care provides services to all persons with disabilities regardless of race, color, ethnicity, age, gender, gender identity or gender expression, religion, or disability.

We work to build close, genuine, caring relationships based on acceptance, trust and rapport with the individuals we serve.

Safety

Host home providers are thoroughly vetted before being certified.  Background checks are completed on the local, state and if needed, federal level.  In addition, experience in caregiving is scrutinized.  Personal and work references are checked as well.

Partners in Care provides ongoing case management for the individuals in our host homes, monitoring on an ongoing basis, but at a minimum of once per month.  Partners in Care evaluates the performance of our host home providers on an ongoing basis to further ensure the safety of the individuals in the home.

Person Centered Approach

The individuals we serve choose what is most important to them, and most important for them.  Partners in Care then matches them with a home environment that most closely meets their needs and preferences.

Our primary focus is to listen to each individual’s goals and desires, and then work as a team to develop a meaningful program.

Partners in Care is committed to cooperation & teamwork as the basis for problem solving.

Figuring out how best to deliver services to adults with disabilities is difficult. There are competing interests and radically differing points of view. Partners in Care works to ensure that all the resources available are directed to solutions and stability. Partners in Care is committed to addressing the needs of adults with disabilities, utilizing both the value of past experience and new, untried, creative interventions.