Memory Lane for dementia care at home
Dementia care

More peace, recognition, and contact in dementia care at home

Dementia changes daily life step by step. Memory Lane helps families and familiar caregivers stay close with a screen that feels like a photo frame and can adapt to what someone still finds pleasant.

Informal care in dementia

When the relationship changes, technology needs to become simpler

mantelzorg.nl describes that dementia also affects the partner, family or friend. Sharing care, setting boundaries, and organizing help are becoming increasingly important.

Memory Lane connects with a familiar photo frame design, large buttons, remote management, video calling with familiar faces, calendar, and a scalable interface. More information about informal care in dementia can be found at mantelzorg.nl.

fewer steps

for contact, photos, calendar, and recognition.

familiar image

a photo frame instead of a busy tablet.

together caring

family can manage functions and content remotely.

Memory Lane in practice

Dementia care requires fewer stimuli and more recognition

An interface that adapts

In the beginning, video calls, photos, calendar, and entertainment can coexist. If choices become overwhelming, the interface can be organized more calmly with fewer buttons and less distraction.

Family remains visibly close

Large photos and familiar names aid recognition. Video calls and postcards allow contact without requiring someone to understand a phone or app.

Caregivers work together

As care can become heavier, Memory Lane helps distribute tasks: managing relationships, adding photos, keeping the calendar, adjusting settings, and monitoring signals.

Memory Lane agenda for daily structure in dementia
Features

Practical support without the feeling of a care device

  • Photos and memories: familiar images can evoke stories, recognition, and calm.
  • Video calling: family can see how things are going, with large photos and clear buttons.
  • Agenda and daily rhythm: appointments, birthdays, and memories remain visible in a fixed place.
  • Minimal mode: functions can be reduced when stimuli or choices become too overwhelming.
  • AI and logbook: signals and patterns can help family notice changes earlier.

Based on information about Memory Lane dementia care and informal care for dementia at mymemorylane.com and mantelzorg.nl.

For families wanting to lighten dementia care at home

Memory Lane does not cure dementia and does not replace professional care. It does help to make contact, daily structure, and recognition easier, providing more calm for the person with dementia and those around them.