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AGING & DISABILITY SERVICES ADMINISTRATION

Specialized Dementia Care Program in Boarding Homes

The Specialized Dementia Care Program is for a person with dementia who can no longer live at home and needs state-funding (Medicaid) to help pay for long-term care services in a facility.  Learn more about alternatives if the person is not eligible for Medicaid.

Offered through the Department of Social and Health Services (DSHS), a person with dementia receives a package of specialized dementia care services while living at a boarding home.  Learn more about what a boarding home is.

The goal of the program is to help a person with dementia maintain the highest possible quality of life and physical health while living with the losses typical of dementia. 

What Services Are Offered

The package of specialized dementia care services include (in part):

Read the state rules that define what services must be offered.

Program Eligibility

A person with dementia must meet all three of the following criteria to be eligible for this program.  The person must be:

  1. Diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease or another irreversible dementia such as vascular dementia, Lewy body dementia, Pick’s disease, or Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease.
  2. Receiving or eligible for state assistance (Medicaid).
  3. Assessed by a DSHS assigned case manager and found to have the need for specialized dementia care.

Space must also be available in a boarding home that contracts with DSHS to provide this package of specialized dementia services.  Due to limited funding, DSHS contracts with a small number of boarding homes throughout the state to offer this program.

Taking the Next Step