The Family Focus Guide helps families and individuals in and around the Fayetteville area find resources in our community.
If you have a service-focused organization that serves families in the Fayetteville, Cumberland County area and would like to be listed, please email us at [email protected].
Our goal is to help seniors and recovering patients who prefer to stay in their own home while receiving personal care. We arrange for non-medical in-home care visits from registered nurses, personal care aids, and certified nurse assistants. We carry a wide range of packages to suit a variety of budgets and needs. A 3 hour daily minimum applies.
Liberty Home Care & Hospice service offers a full range of home care services, across a broad section of central and coastal North Carolina, South Carolina, and Virginia. Liberty is a Medicaid and Medicare certified provider of health care. You can trust Liberty for high-quality senior care, home care, and hospice services. We employ superior caregivers who are specially trained and certified.
Maxim Healthcare Services has been making a difference in patients’ lives across the nation for more than 30 years. Our team of nurses and home health aides helps patients of all ages maintain the highest quality of life in the comforts of the home. We offer skilled nursing, companion care, respite care, and behavioral care for individuals with chronic and acute illnesses and disabilities. Our commitment to compassionate care and excellent service makes us an established provider wherever healthcare is needed.
Monday 8:00 AM-5:30 PM; Tuesday 8:00 AM-5:30 PM; Wednesday 8:00 AM-5:30 PM; Thursday 8:00 AM-5:30 PM; Friday 8:00 AM-5:30 PM
Provides home visits, infant care, and parenting classes.
The Nurturing Parenting Programs are family-based programs that can be offered in a group setting, in a home-visiting setting, or as a combination of both group meetings and home visitation.[1] Components of the program include 1) developing empathy, facilitating parent-child bonding and attachment; 2) teaching parents appropriate expectations of children’s growth, particularly ways to promote children’s feelings of self-worth, trust, and security; 3) employing discipline that promotes the dignity of children and adults; 4) empowering adults and children to nurture themselves, others, and their environment; 5) promoting positive self-worth; and 6) helping all family members develop a meaningful level of selfawareness and acceptance. Parent education programs that are designed to prevent the development of poor parenting behaviors are short-term, approximately five to 18 sessions in length. Parenting intervention programs are designed to “intervene” to prevent escalation in the early stages of maltreatment. These are generally from 12 to 20 sessions. Parenting treatment programs are designed to “treat” abusive and neglectful parent-child or parent-teen dysfunctional interactions. These are generally 15 to 25 sessions.