Home Care Is About Love: Why Compassion Is More Important Now
When the search for home care begins in New York, families commonly think of services, schedules or cost. However, beneath all those practical concerns is something fundamental: love. True senior home care services aren’t strictly about receiving help for daily activities — it is about preserving dignity, companionship, and an environment where older adults are preserved.
“Home care is love in action: the patiently prepared warm meal, holding a hand in quietness, and the gentle remark that says — you are not alone”
Home care beyond services: love
Yes, practical help is important. Bathing, cooking and medication reminders are all crucial. However, the home care and the value of caring for elderly at home is deeper. Families choose home care precisely because this will allow their loved ones to have their familiar memories to be close to them, and to be in their comfort zone of home.
At Angel Care Inc. NY, we do not view home care services as checklists. Each assurance to provide care is rooted in the action of demonstrating love.
Love as Safety
One way love is shown in home care is through protection. Families and caregivers want to help provide a prospect safe environment by:
- Installing grab bars and improving lighting.
- Making sure medications are administered correctly.
- Providing presence in episodes of illness or recovery.
- Waking up to watch loved ones at night for peace of mind.
Every deliberation on how to provide safety is a consideration of saying “your life is valuable”

Love as Dignity
Seniors often wanted dignity over convenience. A compassionate caregiver in NY helps preserve dignity by:
- Acknowledging daily habits and routines.
- Supporting independence as much as possible.
- Encouraging seniors to make their own decisions about meals, clothing, or other activities.
- Providing companionship free from judging.
Elderly home care is not solely about surviving; it’s about preserving dignity.
Professional Care with a Heart
People often wonder if professional care is personal. At Angel Care Inc. NY, yes it is. Our professional caregivers provide skilled and competent assistance, but mostly there is love, patience and human compassion.
Families often use CDPAP in New York, a self-directed program where a family member or trusted friend can become a compensated caregiver. This needs a combination of the structure required of medicaid, and the family love of a caregiver.
“Professional Caregivers are helping, and in a sense carrying love, to each home they step into.”
Concluding Thoughts: Love in Home Care
Ultimately, home care in New York isn’t about medical routines, or spruce house cleaning. It is about the love impacted a daughter to become a CDPAP caregiver; the kindness that inspires aides to show up again today; the dignity that allows seniors to remain at home in comfort and grace.
At Angel Care Inc. NY, we believe that love is not unique into caregiving, it’s at the basis of everything we do.

Home care is an ever-evolving space. 2025 has ushered in some impactful changes for seniors, caregivers, and families in New York. While reading through the legislative terminology can sound complex, the question behind all questions is simple: how does this impact the day-to-day life of older adults who are relying on support at home? “Behind every law or regulation there’s a family asking, “What does this mean for us?” We want to provide the answers.” Increased Rates for Home Care Aides As of January 2025, the increased minimum wage for home care aides in New York: $19.10 per hour for New York City, Long Island, and Westchester. $18.10 per hour for the rest of New York State. What this means for families: Care agencies may become somewhat more costly. However, increased wages will potentially help keep more caregivers in the field of care, helping alleviate staffing shortages, and thereby giving families dependable assistance. Changes to the CDPAP Program Consumer Directed Personal Assistance Program (CDPAP) is a program that allows seniors and people with disabilities to retain a family member, friend, or trusted person as a paid caregiver. Lawmakers in Albany are making progress with new rules for 2025 to reintroduce choice for families instead of limiting the number of governing agencies in the process. What it means for families: In the near future families will have greater choice in an Fiscal Intermediary (the agency that pays and completes the paperwork). This could mean less services, and less wait time. New Rules for Home Care Agencies The New York Department of Health created new steps for preparing home care agencies to manage their licenses. What it means for families: Some agencies may have some stumbles and some paperwork. For clients, this should not affect their daily care cline however may slow the velocity of rollout to new services or new locations. Medicare and Home Health Medicare altered the payment rates for home health care in 2025 at the federal level. There are completely new rules for agencies to collect more information on clients (OASIS forms) to be rolled out in July. What this means for families: If clients have Medicare home health care, the way agencies are collecting data to document care will be much more inclusive. For clients, probably they have to dig deeper during visits. This is all intended to track better quality of care. Telehealth Rules Will Change Again During the pandemic telehealth became a true godsend. In 2025 Medicare will continue pay for most telehealth services from home until September 30, 2025. After that, pay will be limited and patients will receive reimbursement for very few telehealth visits. What it means for families: For now, seniors will see doctors virtually in their homes. Later in the year, telehealth visit coverage will decrease resulting in in-person visits. Why These Changes Are Important When taken as a whole, these new guidelines suggest two overarching trends: Caregivers are getting more supports – wages rising, acknowledgment for work and flexibility in programs. Paperwork and compliance are creating increases – limiting pay and/or how quickly seniors consent to care. "Laws may be changing but the need is still the same – families need safe, reliable, and affordable care for their loved ones." Angel Care Inc. NY Supports Families New laws or not, one thing will not change - families need support. Angel Care Inc. NY: Helps families understand what new laws mean for them. Provides families with support for their Medicaid applications and assessments. Provides families with trained home care aides with the wage rates as determined by the new law. Enrolls families in the CDPAP so families can be paid for providing care to their loved ones. Notifies clients when telehealth and Medicare laws change. To Conclude New laws in 2025 will change from home care in New York and across the country. Some of the changes will introduce obstacles, and others will increase stability and fairness in care. For seniors living alone or living with limited supports – these laws suggest the importance of having a trustworthy agency watching out for them! Angel Care Inc. NY is here to support families through each step from the laws to delivering care home. Despite the increased formalization of home, we assure that home received will be both safe, dignified and accessible. Sources and Further Reading For those who want to explore the official documents and announcements, here are the primary references used: New York Home Care Wage Increase (2025) Updates on CDPAP (Consumer Directed Personal Assistance Program) NY DOH Licensure Amendments for LHCSAs (Home Care Agencies) Medicare Home Health Payment Rates (2025) OASIS All-Payer Data Collection Requirement (July 2025) Telehealth Policy Updates Federal Legislation – “One Big Beautiful Bill Act” (2025)