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Paid $2,000 for a 'comprehensive' in-home care assessment that basically just told us to hire an in-home caregiver.
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wade_kelly7718d ago
Honestly that report might be more useful than it seems. Paying for expert advice can save a ton of money and stress later by avoiding bad hires. They probably gave you a detailed plan on what type of care is actually needed, which is a big deal. Knowing the exact skills to look for stops you from hiring the wrong person. That two grand could prevent a costly mistake that hurts your family.
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hannah_west3918d ago
Yeah but wade_kelly77 is giving that report too much credit. A lot of those assessments just list basic stuff anyone could find online. The real value would be helping you actually find and hire someone, which they didn't do.
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matthewmiller18d ago
Two thousand dollars for someone to tell you to hire help feels like a scam dressed up as a service. How much expert advice do you really need to figure out you need a caregiver? That's just stating the obvious problem you already knew you had. The real work is finding the actual person, which they didn't do. Feels like paying a mechanic two grand to confirm your car needs a new engine without fixing it.
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