Comfort Keepers Montclair, Hasbrouck Heights and Parsippany NJ

Comfort Keepers Montclair, Hasbrouck Heights and Parsippany NJ NJ Licensed In-Home Care Provider Serving seniors & adults in the select areas of Essex, Bergen, Passaic, Union, Morris, Hudson & Middlesex counties.

Comfort Keepers provides interactive in-home care for your loved ones in the comforts of their homes. Our caregivers are trained, certified, insured and bonded to provide variety of personal and/or companion care services ranging from companionship to light housekeeping to meal preparation to incidental transportation to grocery shopping to assitance with activities of daily living to specialized

Alzheimer's & Dementia care as well as 24-hour and live-in services. The focus is not only to provide care but to be with the seniors and adults who need the assistance and engage and stimulate their minds via interactions and activities. We serve seniors and adults in the suburban towns of Essex County such as Maplewood, Short Hills, Caldwell, West Caldwell, North Caldwell, Montclair, Glen Ridge, Millburn, Roseland, Essex Fells, Verona, South Orange, West Orange and the select towns of Bergen County such as Rutherford, Fort Lee, Hasbrouck Heights, Hackensack, Leonia, Wood-Ridge, Palisades Park, Ridgefield Park, Carlstadt, East Rutherford, Little Ferry, Borgata, South Hackensack,Teterboro and Moonachie and towns of Clifton, Passaic, Union and Vauxhall.

Juneteenth marks freedom, resilience, and the long work of making sure that freedom reaches everyone.We honor the histor...
06/19/2026

Juneteenth marks freedom, resilience, and the long work of making sure that freedom reaches everyone.

We honor the history this day represents and the communities who have carried it forward.

Wishing everyone a meaningful Juneteenth.

Come join us at Clifton Commons and meet Pooja, Director of Comfort Keepers. We’d love to connect with families and enco...
06/17/2026

Come join us at Clifton Commons and meet Pooja, Director of Comfort Keepers. We’d love to connect with families and encourage everyone to stop by on June 24th.

We'll be there 1:30-5:30 pm.

June is Men's Health Month. Most of the conversation focuses on the physical, heart health, screenings, and staying acti...
06/17/2026

June is Men's Health Month. Most of the conversation focuses on the physical, heart health, screenings, and staying active. All of it matters.

What gets talked about far less is what's happening on the inside.

Aging hits men differently than they expect. A career that defined them for decades ends. Physical strength they took for granted starts to fade. A social life that ran through work or shared activities quietly shrinks. Most men have never been taught to name any of it, let alone ask for help with it.

The result is many older men struggling in ways nobody sees. Depression in men over 65 is widely underdiagnosed. Loneliness in aging men is a genuine health risk, linked to cognitive decline, heart disease, and shorter life expectancy. But because they're not talking about it, the people who love them often don't know it's happening.

What families can do is simple but not easy. Stay in the conversation. Ask direct questions. Notice when he's withdrawn from things he used to care about. Don't let "I'm fine" be the end of the discussion.

The men who age well aren't the ones who push through alone. They're the ones who stay connected.

June 15 is World Elder Abuse Awareness Day. It's a topic most families never think will apply to them. That's exactly wh...
06/15/2026

June 15 is World Elder Abuse Awareness Day. It's a topic most families never think will apply to them. That's exactly why it's worth talking about.

Elder abuse isn't always physical, and it isn't always a stranger. Swipe through to learn the signs every family should know.

If you have concerns about a loved one's safety, contact NJ Adult Protective Services at 1-855-4-NJHOPE.

Bringing a caregiver into your home for the first time feels like a big step. Most families don't know what to expect. T...
06/13/2026

Bringing a caregiver into your home for the first time feels like a big step. Most families don't know what to expect. The first week looks like this:

🔷Day one is about introductions, not tasks. Your caregiver's first job is to get to know your loved one. Their routines, their preferences, the things that make them comfortable. It's slower than families expect, and that's intentional.

🔷Your loved one may be resistant at first. That's normal. Change is hard, especially for seniors who value their independence. It usually takes a few visits before things feel familiar. Give it time before drawing conclusions.

🔷You may feel guilty. Also normal. Bringing in help doesn't mean stepping back. It means your loved one has more support, not less of you.

🔷The routine builds quickly. By the end of the first week, most families notice a shift. Their loved one is more comfortable. The caregiver knows their rhythm. What felt unfamiliar starts to feel like part of the day.

🔷You'll have someone to call. Questions come up. That's expected. You won't be left figuring it out alone.

The first week is an adjustment. It's also the beginning of something that tends
to make life genuinely better for everyone involved.

Not sure if your loved one needs extra support? Answer these honestly.In the last few months, have you noticed any of th...
06/11/2026

Not sure if your loved one needs extra support? Answer these honestly.

In the last few months, have you noticed any of the following?

☐ Meals skipped or forgotten more than once a week
☐ Medications missed or taken incorrectly
☐ Unexplained bruises, falls, or close calls
☐ The house is harder to keep up than it used to be
☐ They've stopped doing things they used to enjoy
☐ You've started worrying about leaving them alone
☐ You're exhausted from trying to manage everything yourself

If you checked even two or three of these, it may be worth having a conversation about in-home care.

Not because something is wrong. Because getting ahead of it is always better than catching up after a crisis.

Aging at home sounds simple. In practice, families run into the same misconceptions over and over.❌Myth: "They're fine b...
06/09/2026

Aging at home sounds simple. In practice, families run into the same misconceptions over and over.

❌Myth: "They're fine because they say they're fine."
✔️Truth: Most people won't ask for help when they need it. Pride, habit, and not wanting to worry anyone get in the way. What they say and what they need are often two different things.

❌Myth: "Home is automatically the safest place."
✔️Truth: It can be. It isn't always. Falls, medication errors, and isolation are among the leading risks for seniors, and they all happen at home.

❌Myth: "We'll know when it's time to get help."
✔️Truth: Most families recognize it in hindsight, after a crisis that could have been prevented with earlier support.

❌Myth: "Having a caregiver means giving up independence."
✔️Truth: The right support helps people stay home longer, on their own terms.

The best time to ask questions is before you need the answers. Reach out: https://www.comfortkeepers.com/

Some of the earliest signs of cognitive change aren't dramatic. They're quiet, easy to dismiss and explain away.A shirt ...
06/07/2026

Some of the earliest signs of cognitive change aren't dramatic. They're quiet, easy to dismiss and explain away.

A shirt that suddenly takes longer to button. A recipe that's always been second nature that now requires concentration. A word that should come easily but just won't.

These moments matter. Swipe through to see what families often miss, and what they mean.

06/05/2026

Daily life with Alzheimer's doesn't always look the way people expect.

It's a good morning followed by a hard afternoon. It's a familiar face that brings comfort when words no longer come easily. It's a routine that quietly becomes the most important thing in the room.

For families, it's learning to meet your loved one where they are, every single day.

That's what our caregivers do too. They show up, they adapt, and they make sure your loved one never feels alone in it.

Address

31 Park Street 2nd Floor
Montclair, NJ
07042

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