Dementia & Memory Care
Real-time, person-centered guidance for confusion, agitation, sundowning, refusal, and wandering — rooted in dignity and validation.
CareCue helps care partners navigate the moments that matter most — with real-time, dignity-first guidance for whoever is in the room.
Built by operators who've stood on the floor and faced the hard moments. Not a tech company. Not a clinical tool. Just fast, practical guidance for the moment in front of you.
Real situations. Real care partners. The question is always the same.
A parent is confused and accusing their daughter of stealing. She's escalating. Nothing is calming her down.
The care partner in the room is doing their best — but doesn't know where to start.
A resident is sundowning and refusing care. It's 5pm, and every approach so far has made it worse.
Staff know this resident well — but in this moment, the right response isn't coming.
A child is overwhelmed and melting down after an unexpected routine change. They can't communicate what's wrong.
The care partner wants to help but isn't sure how to respond without making things worse.
Instead of asking "How do I stop this behavior?" —
CareCue helps you ask "What is this person trying to tell me,
and how can I support them safely and with dignity?"
That shift changes everything about how care gets delivered in hard moments.
A cue is a signal. A prompt. The thing that tells you what to do next when you're not sure. In caregiving, that's exactly what's missing — in the hardest moments, even great care partners freeze. They need something to cut through and point the way. CareCue is that cue. It meets you in the moment, gives you the signal you need, and gets you through it.
CareCue keeps each tool focused, simple, and practical — so care partners can get useful next steps quickly, for whoever is in the room.
Real-time, person-centered guidance for confusion, agitation, sundowning, refusal, and wandering — rooted in dignity and validation.
Real-time guidance for meltdowns, shutdowns, sensory overload, communication needs, and routine changes — with a neurodiversity-affirming approach.
CareCue isn't just for care teams. If you're a spouse, adult child, or family member supporting someone at home — there's a version built specifically for you.
Warm, judgment-free guidance in plain language. Try it free, then unlock unlimited access — no subscription, ever.
Try It Free →Designed for stressful moments, not complicated workflows.
Mostly tap-based inputs — behavior, timing, context. Minimal typing required. Works for anyone in the room.
AI interprets the situation through a dignity-first, person-centered lens — not a generic algorithm.
What's likely happening, why, and exactly what to try — validation first, every time.
Share guidance with a supervisor when a moment needs more attention. Nothing stored — no HIPAA risk.
Every CareCue response is structured to give care partners exactly what they need — and nothing they don't.
Team Training, Simplified. Physical and digital scenario cards and training topic cards — designed to make quick, accessible training a reality for care teams of any size.
Care partners are facing more complex situations than ever — with limited training, limited time, and limited support. In the middle of a hard moment, it can be nearly impossible to know how to respond.
Training manuals, care plans, and online searches are valuable — but they are not designed for the urgent question care partners face in real time.
"What should I do right now?"
That gap creates stress, burnout, and moments where the person receiving care feels misunderstood instead of supported.
CareCue was built to close that gap — by people who've stood on the floor, faced the hard moments, and understood what support people actually need. Not later. Not in a training. Right now.
Care partners should not have to face those moments alone.
CareCue is not replacing care.
It is supporting the people who provide it.
CareCue is here to help care partners feel less alone and more prepared in the moments that matter most — for whoever is in the room, whenever they need it.