Home Care vs. Home Health: What’s the Difference, and Which Does Your Parent Actually Need?
If you’ve started researching care options for an aging parent, you’ve almost certainly run into both terms: home health and home care. They sound nearly identical. They’re often used interchangeably in conversation. And they are, in fact, completely different services — paid for differently, provided by different people, and designed to solve different problems.
Confusing the two is one of the most common and most consequential mistakes families make when planning for a parent’s care. Understanding the distinction could save you thousands of dollars, prevent a gap in coverage you didn’t see coming, and help you ask the right questions before a health crisis forces the conversation.
Here’s a clear breakdown of what each one is, what it covers, and how to know which one your parent actually needs.
What is a home health agency?
Home health is medical care delivered in the home. It’s provided by licensed clinical professionals — registered nurses, physical therapists, occupational therapists, speech therapists, and medical social workers — and it requires a physician’s order to start.
Home health is typically short-term and goal-oriented. A person comes home after a hip replacement and needs physical therapy. A nurse comes to check a wound, monitor vitals, or administer an IV medication. An occupational therapist helps someone relearn how to dress and bathe safely after a stroke. Once those clinical goals are met, the service ends.
In Michigan, home health is covered by Medicare Part A when four conditions are met:
- The patient is homebound (leaving home requires considerable effort)
- A doctor has ordered the care
- The care is medically necessary and skilled
- The agency is Medicare-certified
This sounds reassuring — and it can be, for what it is. But it’s important to understand what home health does not cover. It does not pay for help with bathing or dressing on its own. It does not cover companionship, meal preparation, or housekeeping. And once the skilled care need is resolved, Medicare stops paying — often leaving families surprised by the gap.
What is a home care agency?
Home care — sometimes called non-medical home care or personal care — is supportive, daily living assistance provided by trained caregivers. It doesn’t require a doctor’s order. It isn’t covered by traditional Medicare. And it doesn’t end when a medical goal is reached, because it’s not treating a condition — it’s helping someone live their life.
Home care covers the kinds of help that keep a person safe, comfortable, and connected at home over the long term:
- Bathing, dressing, and personal hygiene
- Meal planning and preparation
- Light housekeeping and laundry
- Medication reminders
- Transportation to appointments and errands
- Companionship and social engagement
- Specialized support for dementia, Parkinson’s, and other chronic conditions
Home care is typically paid through private funds, long-term care insurance, or — in some cases — Veterans may also have access to home care benefits through the VA Aid and Attendance program.
Unlike home health, home care can begin immediately and continue for as long as a person needs it, from a few hours a week to full-time daily support.
Side-by-side comparison
|
|
Home health agency |
Home care agency |
|
Who provides care |
Nurses, PTs, OTs, social workers |
Trained professional caregivers |
|
Type of care |
Medical / clinical |
Non-medical / supportive |
|
Paid by |
Medicare, Medicaid, insurance |
Private pay, long-term care insurance, or Veterans Benefit Assistance |
|
Requires a doctor order? |
Yes |
No |
|
Typical duration |
Short-term (weeks to months) |
Ongoing, as long as needed |
|
Examples of tasks |
Wound care, injections, physical therapy, post-surgical rehab |
Bathing, dressing, meals, companionship, medication reminders, transportation |
The gap nobody talks about
Here’s the situation we see most often: a parent has a health event (a fall, a surgery, a hospitalization) and comes home with a home health order from the hospital. A nurse visits three times a week. A physical therapist comes twice. The family feels like things are covered.
Then, six weeks later, the home health agency calls to say the skilled care goals have been met and services are ending. The parent is still frail. Still needs help getting dressed. Still shouldn’t be left alone for eight hours. But Medicare is done paying, because the medical need has been addressed.
This is the gap, and it catches families off guard constantly. Home health and home care are not a sequence where one picks up where the other leaves off. They’re parallel services that address completely different needs, and many families ultimately need both.
If your parent is currently receiving home health services, the time to think about home care is now, before those skilled services end and you’re scrambling.
How to know which one your parent needs right now
Ask yourself these questions:
- Does my parent have a specific medical need being actively treated — wound care, post-surgical rehab, medication management by a nurse? → Home health is likely appropriate, with a physician’s order.
- Does my parent need help with daily tasks like bathing, meals, and getting around the house safely? → Home care is what you’re looking for.
- Has my parent recently been discharged from a hospital or rehab facility? → They may need both simultaneously during recovery.
- Is the primary concern safety, isolation, or cognitive decline — rather than a specific medical condition? → Home care, often with specialized dementia or Parkinson’s training, is the right fit.
Many families find that home health handles the clinical piece for a few weeks after a health event, while home care provides the consistent daily presence that actually enables someone to stay at home safely over time. The two work well together, they just need to be arranged separately.
What to look for in a home care agency in West Michigan
Not all home care agencies are the same. When evaluating options for your parent, ask:
- Are caregivers employees of the agency, or independent contractors? Employees are typically screened, trained, and supervised more rigorously.
- What specialized training do caregivers receive for conditions like Alzheimer’s, dementia, or Parkinson’s disease?
- Is the agency available for after-hours emergencies and schedule changes?
- Can care plans be customized as needs change over time?
- Who do I call if there’s a concern about a caregiver?
These questions will tell you a lot about whether an agency is built for the long term or just to fill shifts.
About Senior Helpers of Greater Grand Rapids
We’re a non-medical home care agency serving Grandville, Jenison, Hudsonville, Byron Center, Zeeland, and surrounding West Michigan communities. Our agency is co-owned by John Frutiger, whose background spans health systems and care technology, and Elizabeth Frutiger, PA-C, a licensed Physician Assistant.
Our caregivers receive specialized training in dementia and Alzheimer’s care through the Senior Gems® methodology, as well as Parkinson’s care, transitional care, and veteran support.
If you’re not sure whether your parent needs home health, home care, or both — call us. We’ll help you figure it out, no obligation required.