Senior TLC - Charlotte

Senior TLC - Charlotte Senior TLC is a PACE program, a Medicare and Medicaid State option that provides a different kind of care.

We serve participants 55 and older, offering both preventive and long-term care services for individuals who need a nursing home level of care. Senior TLC (formerly PACE of the Southern Piedmont) is here to help you continue living in the home and community you love. The Program of All-Inclusive Care (PACE) is a Medicare not for profit, Medicaid State option program. We serve participants 55 and o

lder, by providing preventive and long-term care services for those requiring nursing home level of care. Our number one goal is to empower our aging population with the choice to live safely in the home they love. Our PACE team will work closely with you to determine program eligibility and any out of pocket cost.

June is Alzheimer's & Brain Awareness Month, and this one hits home for a lot of the families we serve.More than 7 milli...
06/03/2026

June is Alzheimer's & Brain Awareness Month, and this one hits home for a lot of the families we serve.

More than 7 million Americans are currently living with Alzheimer's disease. Behind every one of them is at least one family member, partner or friend doing their best to navigate something that doesn't come with a roadmap. It is exhausting work. It is also, often, deeply meaningful work.

This month, we'll be sharing brain-healthy habits, early warning signs to know, and ways families can support each other through a diagnosis — including The Longest Day on June 21, when we honor everyone affected by the disease.

If you're navigating Alzheimer's or another form of dementia with someone you love, you are not alone. We see you.

Follow along this month, and reach out anytime you need support.

June is National Safety Month — and this year marks the 30th anniversary of the observance.For older adults and the fami...
06/01/2026

June is National Safety Month — and this year marks the 30th anniversary of the observance.

For older adults and the families who love them, safety often comes down to small, consistent things. A clear path to the bathroom at night. A bathmat with grip. A pill organizer that makes a complicated medication schedule manageable. A trusted person to call when something feels off.

This month, we'll be sharing practical, senior-focused safety content — fall prevention, summer heat safety, home audits and more.

Safety isn't a single grand gesture. It's the accumulation of small good choices, made every day, by people who care.

Know someone who'd be a great caregiver?Some of the best people on our team came to us through someone who knew them — a...
05/30/2026

Know someone who'd be a great caregiver?

Some of the best people on our team came to us through someone who knew them — a friend, a family member, a former coworker who saw their warmth and steadiness and thought "they would be so good at this."

Share this post with the person you're thinking of. Or send them a link to our open positions on our website. Sometimes a single nudge from someone who believes in them is what gets a great caregiver started.

Know someone who'd be a great caregiver?Some of the best people on our team came to us through someone who knew them — a...
05/30/2026

Know someone who'd be a great caregiver?

Some of the best people on our team came to us through someone who knew them — a friend, a family member, a former coworker who saw their warmth and steadiness and thought "they would be so good at this."

If that's you and someone is coming to mind right now — we'd love to meet them. The qualities that make a great caregiver aren't things you can teach: patience, real warmth, a steady presence, the kind of attentiveness that notices small things. The clinical skills we can train. The heart, you either have or you don't.

Share this post with the person you're thinking of. Or send them a link to our open positions on our website. Sometimes a single nudge from someone who believes in them is what gets a great caregiver started.

As Older Americans Month and Mental Health Awareness Month wind down, we want to leave you with this:Asking for help is ...
05/29/2026

As Older Americans Month and Mental Health Awareness Month wind down, we want to leave you with this:

Asking for help is a strength, not a weakness.

We talk to families every week who've been quietly carrying too much for too long. Adult children juggling careers, kids and a parent who needs more support. Spouses caring for partners through illness with no break. Older adults trying to stay independent at home and quietly worried about the things that are getting harder.

The decision to bring in help can feel huge. Like an admission of failure. Like giving up. But it's actually the opposite — it's the thing that lets people stay independent longer, lets caregivers stay healthy, lets families enjoy time together instead of just managing through it.

If you've been wondering whether home care might be the right step for your family, we'd love to talk. No pressure, no obligation — just a real conversation about what you're navigating and what might help.

Reach out to Senior TLC. We're here when you're ready.

May is Arthritis Awareness Month, and if you or someone you love is among the more than 50 million American adults livin...
05/28/2026

May is Arthritis Awareness Month, and if you or someone you love is among the more than 50 million American adults living with it, you already know — it shapes the day in ways nobody else really sees.

This is your gentle reminder: Needing help with opening jars, climbing stairs or reaching the top shelf is not a failure. It's living wisely with a real condition.

If arthritis is making everyday tasks harder for someone you love, in-home support can make a real difference.

Today is National Senior Health & Fitness Day — and it lands perfectly in the middle of Older Americans Month with its "...
05/27/2026

Today is National Senior Health & Fitness Day — and it lands perfectly in the middle of Older Americans Month with its "Champion Your Health" theme.

It is never, ever too late to start moving. The research is clear that even gentle, consistent movement in older adulthood improves balance, strength, mood and sleep — and reduces the risk of falls and chronic disease.

You don't need a gym. You don't need fancy equipment. You don't need to push through pain. A few ideas to start:

→ A 10-minute walk after meals
→ Chair yoga or seated stretches in the morning
→ Standing on one foot while you brush your teeth (great for balance)
→ Lifting something light during a favorite TV show
→ Gardening, dancing in the kitchen, walking to the mailbox

Pick one small thing today. Then do it again tomorrow. That's how it starts.

What's one way you stay moving?

Today we remember the men and women who gave their lives in service to this country.We hold them, and the families they ...
05/25/2026

Today we remember the men and women who gave their lives in service to this country.

We hold them, and the families they left behind, in our thoughts.

Here's something most people don't know: untreated hearing loss is one of the largest known modifiable risk factors for ...
05/23/2026

Here's something most people don't know: untreated hearing loss is one of the largest known modifiable risk factors for dementia.

A landmark 2020 Lancet Commission report identified hearing loss as the single biggest potentially modifiable risk factor for dementia in midlife. The connection makes sense — when the brain has to work harder to interpret muffled sound, it pulls cognitive resources away from memory and thinking. Over time, social withdrawal often follows, which compounds the problem.

The good news: Treating hearing loss helps. Hearing aids, when worn consistently, are linked to slower cognitive decline.

If you've noticed a loved one turning the TV up, asking "what?" more often, or quietly opting out of conversations they used to enjoy — it's worth a hearing check. May is Better Hearing & Speech Month, and a simple appointment could be one of the most powerful health acts you take this year.

Share this with someone who needs to hear it.

05/22/2026

We get asked sometimes why caregivers stay at Senior TLC.

The answer isn't one big thing. It's a lot of small things.

It's a schedule that respects your life. It's office staff who pick up the phone when you need them. It's being trusted to do the work you trained for, without being micromanaged. It's the relationships our caregivers build with the people they serve — the ones who feel like family after a few months.

It's also being part of a team that genuinely values caregiving as the meaningful work it is. Not "just a job." Not "something to do." Real, important work that changes lives.

If you're a caregiver looking for a place that feels different — we'd love to meet you. Visit our website to view open positions in the Charlotte area.

Address

6133 The Plaza
Charlotte, NC
28215

Opening Hours

Monday 8:30am - 5pm
Tuesday 8:30am - 5pm
Wednesday 8:30am - 5pm
Thursday 8:30am - 5pm
Friday 8:30am - 5pm

Telephone

+17048873840

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