Kirkland is home to EvergreenHealth Medical Center, one of the Eastside’s primary hospitals, and sits at the center of a network of families spread across the Northshore and tech corridor communities. The seniors we support live in neighborhoods like Juanita, Totem Lake, Finn Hill, Houghton, and Rose Hill, established Kirkland communities where people have deep roots and a strong preference for aging in place in the community they know. Acti-Kare has served Puget Sound families for over a decade and is locally owned and operated by Jennie Ruemping, who grew up on the Eastside.
Most families who call us aren’t in crisis yet. They’re watching a parent slow down, noticing that meals aren’t getting made, that driving has stopped, or that a recent fall has everyone on edge. They want help, but they’re not sure what kind or how much. Acti-Kare provides flexible non-medical support that can include personal care, companion care, respite care, 24-hour home care, transportation, meal support, medication reminders, and help after a hospital or rehab stay, matched to what each family actually needs rather than a preset package.
After a stay at EvergreenHealth Medical Center, a rehab facility, or another Eastside provider, the discharge conversation can move fast. Families are often sent home with instructions but not a clear picture of who handles what. Acti-Kare provides non-medical support after discharge, help with bathing, dressing, meals, transportation, mobility, reminders, and light housekeeping, so the home routine stays stable while recovery continues. If you’re not sure whether your loved one needs medical home health, non-medical home care, or both, that’s one of the first things we can help you sort out.
Kirkland families are often managing a lot at once: demanding jobs, kids, travel, aging parents, and the weight of being the primary caregiver on top of all of that adds up fast. Respite care isn’t about stepping back from a parent’s life. It’s about having scheduled, dependable support in place so you’re not the only safety net. Even two or three visits a week can give a family caregiver room to work without guilt, sleep without worry, or simply handle the things that have been piling up.
We hear from many Kirkland families who waited longer than they should have before asking for help. They didn’t want to feel like they were giving up responsibility. What they found instead is that having a consistent caregiver actually kept them more connected, because they weren’t exhausted every time they walked through the door