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    Amada Senior Care

    5.0 (3 reviews)
    Open Open 24 hours

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    Reliant Home Health Care

    Reliant Home Health Care

    5.0(10 reviews)
    1.7 miSouth Summerlin

    I cannot say enough good things about Reliant Home Health Care. From the very first interaction…read morewith Caleb in the UMC hospital post-surgery, to the endless home visits by Tim, Steve and Mark, their professionalism, care and attention to detail stood out (this was my third home health care team after my ski accident over a year ago). Reliant's team consistently went above and beyond, not only addressing my medical needs but also providing support and advice in navigating the healthcare system. Communication was excellent throughout. Jasmine in the office kept me informed, answered every question thoroughly, and they were always responsive and accessible. Perhaps the most impressive was their commitment to quality care. They took the time to personalize their approach, ensuring that every aspect of care was tailored specifically to my needs. That level of dedication is rare, deeply appreciated, and made my wife and I feel like we had the best home health team possible. I would highly recommend Reliant to anyone in need of home health services. They provide not just care, but peace of mind.

    Tim and his staff are amazing. They are the most efficient team and very professional. Everyone…read moreinvolved in your case knows every detail. Tim explains everything in detail and the reason why things happen. They took care of me for 9 months after my quadruple bypass surgery and two infections that followed needing surgy for. He got me thru using a wound vac for six months and the rest of the healing period. He was not only key in my recovery but also with my mental attitude. He can read people very well and sees when you're at your emotional end with the recovery process and knows just how to keep you going. Tim is an amazing medical professional and runs a high-quality company.

    Ideal Home Health Care - The Most Beautiful soul in the world!

    Ideal Home Health Care

    4.3(12 reviews)
    3.8 miWestside

    I am writing to document serious concerns regarding the conduct, practices, and apparent lack of…read moreaccountability involving Ideal Home Health and its employees. Based on what I have personally observed and been made aware of, Ideal Home Health appears to be sending employees into the homes of elderly and vulnerable clients for extremely brief visits, sometimes lasting only a few minutes. During these visits, the employee may take basic vitals, obtain the client's signature on a tablet, and then leave almost immediately. This type of conduct raises serious questions about whether meaningful services are actually being provided, whether the client is receiving the care represented, and whether documentation is being created primarily to support billing rather than actual care. At a minimum, this creates the appearance of questionable billing practices and should be carefully reviewed by the appropriate oversight agencies. This is especially troubling because elderly, disabled, and legally blind clients are among the most vulnerable people in our community. They depend on home health providers to act with honesty, compassion, patience, and professionalism. They should never be treated as billing opportunities, paperwork signatures, or quick stops on a route. I am also concerned by reports and observations that employees of Ideal Home Health have refused to perform basic household tasks, including cleaning bathrooms for elderly clients, despite those clients needing assistance with basic living conditions. When an elderly or disabled client depends on home health assistance, refusing necessary support while still documenting a visit raises serious concerns about neglect, inadequate service, and possible misrepresentation of the level of care actually provided. Even more disturbing are concerns that employees have gone through personal mail belonging to legally blind clients. A legally blind person is already at a significant disadvantage in protecting private papers, financial information, medical correspondence, legal documents, and personal communications. Any employee who handles, searches through, reads, opens, or interferes with a client's personal mail without clear permission may be violating the client's privacy and exploiting the client's disability. That type of conduct is unacceptable and should be treated as a serious breach of trust. The conduct of ownership and management is equally concerning. The owner of Ideal Home Health appears to ignore warning signs instead of addressing them. Rather than ensuring that vulnerable clients are protected, services are properly performed, privacy is respected, and employees are held accountable, the owner's conduct suggests a troubling disregard for legitimate complaints and client safety concerns. It is also highly inappropriate for the owner of a home health company to enter or walk into a client's residence unannounced. Elderly and disabled clients have the right to privacy, dignity, and peaceful possession of their homes. A home health company does not have unlimited access to a client's residence simply because it provides services. Entering a client's home without proper notice, permission, or invitation is intrusive, unprofessional, and potentially unlawful. If a person enters a home unannounced and is then confronted by protective dogs, the fault does not lie with the dogs or the homeowner. The fault lies with the person who entered the residence without proper notice or consent. The owner's response to being confronted is also deeply troubling. Instead of taking responsibility, acknowledging the seriousness of the concerns, or conducting a meaningful internal review, the owner appears to shift blame, minimize the misconduct, and create self-serving narratives to protect herself or the company. In my opinion, she has shown a disturbing tendency to fabricate or exaggerate stories about others when confronted, apparently to justify her own conduct or place herself in a favorable light. This pattern is unacceptable. A company entrusted with elderly, disabled, legally blind, or medically vulnerable clients must operate with the highest degree of honesty, transparency, professionalism, and respect. Ideal Home Health should not be allowed to treat vulnerable people as paperwork, signatures, or insurance claims. It should not be allowed to send employees into homes for token visits while creating documentation that suggests more substantial care was provided. It should not tolerate employees refusing necessary assistance, invading client privacy, or mishandling personal mail. And it should not have ownership that ignores red flags, enters homes unannounced, and then attempts to blame others when confronted. These concerns warrant immediate review by the appropriate licensing, insurance, elder-protection, and law-enforcement authorities. The issues described are not minor misunderstandings. They raise serious questions involving client neglect, privacy violations

    It is highly inappropriate for the owner, Cathy, of a home health company to enter or walk into a…read moreclient's residence unannounced. Elderly and disabled clients have the right to privacy, dignity, and peaceful possession of their homes. A home health company does not have unlimited access to a client's residence simply because it provides services. Entering a client's home without proper notice, permission, or invitation is intrusive, unprofessional, and potentially unlawful. If a person enters a home unannounced and is then confronted by protective dogs, the fault does not lie with the dogs or the homeowner. The fault lies with the person who entered the residence without proper notice or consent. The owner's response to being confronted is also deeply troubling. Instead of taking responsibility, acknowledging the seriousness of the concerns, or conducting a meaningful internal review, the owner appears to shift blame, minimize the misconduct, and create self-serving narratives to protect herself or the company. In my opinion, she has shown a disturbing tendency to fabricate or exaggerate stories about others when confronted, apparently to justify her own conduct or place herself in a favorable light. This pattern is unacceptable. A company entrusted with elderly, disabled, legally blind, or medically vulnerable clients must operate with the highest degree of honesty, transparency, professionalism, and respect. Ideal Home Health should not be allowed to treat vulnerable people as paperwork, signatures, or insurance claims. It should not be allowed to send employees into homes for token visits while creating documentation that suggests more substantial care was provided. It should not tolerate employees refusing necessary assistance, invading client privacy, or mishandling personal mail. And it should not have ownership that ignores red flags, enters homes unannounced, and then attempts to blame others when confronted. These concerns warrant immediate review by the appropriate licensing, insurance, elder-protection, and law-enforcement authorities. The issues described are not minor misunderstandings. They raise serious questions involving client neglect, privacy violations, improper access to a residence, possible misrepresentation of services, and potential insurance or billing irregularities. For the protection of elderly and disabled clients, this matter should be investigated thoroughly. Ideal Home Health should be required to explain exactly what services were billed, what services were actually performed, how long employees remained in the home, what tasks were refused, what personal documents or mail were handled, and why the owner entered a client's home without proper notice or permission. Vulnerable clients deserve care, not exploitation. They deserve respect, not intrusion. They deserve privacy, not employees going through their personal mail. They deserve actual services, not five-minute visits designed to create a paper trail. And they deserve accountability from a company that is being trusted with their health, safety, dignity, and home.

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    Ideal Home Health Care
    Ideal Home Health Care
    Ideal Home Health Care

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    Amada Senior Care - homehealthcare - Updated June 2026

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