top of page
bgImage




Providing Seniors a Place to Feel at Home

FAQs

Learn more about All About Home Assisted Living in Brandenburg, Kentucky and our services by reading these frequently asked questions. If your question still wasn’t answered here, contact us so we can address your concerns.

What services and arrangements are provided by an assisted living community?

In Kentucky, an assisted living community provides each client with a separate living unit that includes a lockable door and a private bathroom. The client can receive assistance with activities of daily living (bathing, dressing, grooming, toileting, eating, transferring), as well as assistance with self-administering his/her own medication.


Meals, housekeeping, laundry and clerical services are also available. Each client may directly arrange with an outside agency or individual to receive health care services, subject to any related policy of the assisted living community.

Is an assisted living community the same as a nursing home?

No. Assisted living communities in Kentucky are defined and regulated differently than nursing homes, although some of the same services are provided. For example, both assisted living communities and nursing homes can provide assistance with activities of daily living (bathing, dressing, grooming, toileting).

 

However, nursing homes can deliver health care services, while a client in an assisted living community must directly arrange with an outside agency or individual to receive health care services. Generally speaking, assisted living communities offer more privacy and independence, because each client has a separate living unit with a lockable door & private bathroom.

Are assisted living services the same in every state?

No. States have different definitions of assisted living.

Who regulates assisted living communities in Kentucky?

Kentucky’s Department for Aging and Independent Living conducts annual certification reviews, or as often as needed, of every assisted living community to determine compliance with the applicable laws and regulation.

Can any business call itself an assisted living community?

No. Kentucky law prohibits any business that hasn’t filed for, or received, assisted living community certification from the Kentucky Department for Aging and Independent Living from marketing itself as an assisted living community.

Do I have to share a living unit with another client?

No. However, you can request to share a living unit with a spouse or another individual under mutual agreement.

Do I have to sign any legal papers?

Yes. An assisted living community in Kentucky is required under law to provide you with a lease agreement for your thorough review, which then must be signed. This lease agreement addresses all provisions, policies, rights, responsibilities, and protections for both the client and the assisted living community.

Can someone help me take my medication?​

Yes, to an extent. The assisted living community employees can, at your request, assist you in self-administering your own medication. In other words, they can remind you to take your medication, read labels, help open your medication containers, and help store your medication.


However, employees can’t touch the actual medication, determine or administer dosages, give injections, or advise you about the appropriateness of your medication. You must directly arrange with an outside agency or individual, such as your pharmacist, doctor, home health agency, or another qualified person of your choice, to receive those services. 

Can I bring furniture and furnishings for my living unit? 

Yes. Assisted living communities in Kentucky encourage clients to bring their own furniture, furnishings, and keepsakes.

Are the assisted living community employees required to be trained?

Yes. Kentucky law requires employees to be trained on a variety of key topics applicable to their assigned duties.

Do assisted living communities conduct criminal records checks on their employees?

Yes. Assisted living communities are required to conduct criminal records checks on employee applicants. Many also voluntarily ensure that no employee applicants are listed on Kentucky’s nurse aide abuse registry.

Does Medicare or Medicaid pay for assisted living services in Kentucky?

No. Neither Medicare nor Medicaid pays for these services.

Will I ever have to move out of the assisted living community?

Kentucky law requires that a client must be ambulatory or be mobile non-ambulatory, such as able to get around with a walker or in a wheelchair without assistance. Any client who needs health care services must directly arrange to receive those services from an outside agency or individual, or otherwise be required to move out of the assisted living community.


In addition, any client who poses a danger to self or others must move out. Lastly, a client who is unable to continue paying for services must be given at least a 30-day notice by the assisted living community before being required to move out. An assisted living community that issues a move-out notice must have provisions for assisting the client in finding appropriate living arrangements prior to the actual move-out date.

bottom of page