Cascades Adult Family Home sits in a quiet neighborhood with big windows looking out at Lake Sammamish and the Cascade Mountains, and the house feels like a home, not an institution, with only six residents. Licensed by the State of Washington, the home takes care of people who can't live alone anymore, and the staff includes a Registered Nurse with more than twenty years in senior care and more than thirty years of senior care experience combined. The staff is always present, day and night, and they help with almost every need a resident could have-things like bathing, grooming, toilet reminders, dressing, and careful monitoring for conditions such as Alzheimer's, dementia, Parkinson's, stroke, diabetes, cardiac issues, COPD, depression, or mental health problems, so no one's left alone with tough conditions like bed-bound needs, insulin, feeding tubes, or special diets for diabetes and heart disease. They know how to use Hoyer lifts for moving people, do oxygen therapy, help with wound care, catheter and colostomy care, and even handle aggressive behavior or wandering for those with dementia, and the memory care section of the community uses technology like bracelets and a secured door system to alert staff if someone tries to wander, which means safety is a focus and the staff is used to physical transfers, behavioral support, and dealing with difficult health or mobility issues, and they can support both men and women but the community is set up for female residents right now.
Meals come in many forms, with anytime dining, restaurant-style, room service, organic and vegan choices, and special low/no salt or sugar menus, so the kitchen will meet dietary restrictions, and meals are served in common areas or in rooms for anyone who needs it. Everyone gets private rooms with their own bathrooms, and the whole place is set up for wheelchair users, walkers, and has an emergency button system, internet, cable TV choices, private telephones, air conditioning, a generator for emergencies, and shared gardens for fresh air. There's always activities going on, with stretching and art classes, brain fitness like Dakim, pet visits, and devotional services, and they welcome respite residents for short stays so family caregivers can get a break. Residents have nurses and doctors available, and can get physical, occupational, speech, and podiatry therapy right in the home, plus pharmacy and medication delivery, and weekly laundry and housekeeping. There's special care for folks with hearing or vision loss, traumatic brain injury, mental health needs, and support for those who need hospice care or who are on dialysis. The house is non-smoking indoors, with some outdoor spaces and plenty of open shared rooms for group time or quiet visits. The caregivers have specific training in Alzheimer's, dementia, mental health, CPR, and first aid, and approach each resident as an individual, respecting privacy and dignity, and working to keep everyone engaged and safe, so people can stay as their care needs change, and aging in place is possible here. The property's close to the freeway and hospitals, with free parking and rides for doctor visits, and the home environment means people get to stay away from large, busy facilities, which a lot of residents and families find comforting.