Providing Homecare for Seniors in Prineville
Right at Home in Home Care provides comprehensive in home care services in Prineville including light housekeeping, transportation, one on one assistance with bathing, toileting, medication management, transfers, and end of life care. We also provide Skilled Nursing Tasks including wound care, tube feeding, diabetic monitoring and a host of other services.
Right at Home is unique. We charge ONE RATE and your rate won’t change and you will not be billed for extra services. Our caregivers are experienced, have been drug tested, and have passed 2 criminal background checks.
We provide care in your Prineville home and other facilities including Ashley Manor, Carriage Place, and Regency Village.
We also coordinate care with St. Charles Health Systems Prineville, A Place For Mom, and Regency Prineville Rehabilitation & Nursing Center. Call Right at Home at 541-633-7436 and find out why we’re a top agency in the nation!
Prineville is a historical, small town of just over 9,000 residents. Prineville is one of central and eastern Oregon’s real “cowboy towns.”there are hundreds of farms that produce garlic, mint, and hay. There are also many cattle ranches in Prineville and its outlying areas. This High Desert town is surrounded by mesas, and recreation in the area includes The Prineville Reservoir, and The Ochoco Reservoir. The scenic and incredible Painted Hills are a short drive east. Prineville is also home of the historic Crook County Courthouse and The Bowman Museum. The museum is a local history museum that was opened in 1971. It’s housed in the old Crook County Bank Building which is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
This close-knit community was devastated in 1994 when 9 of its ‘Hot Shot’ firefighters were killed on Storm King Mountain in Colorado battling a blaze. High winds overtook the crew and they perished. The community honors them with this memorial. Many of the firefighters’ families still live in Prineville.
Fly fisherman come from all over the world to test their skills in the Crooked River, seen here winding its way under Chimney Rock. Steins Pillar was first inhabited by the Shoshone Indians. This gorgeous monument is considered sacred and thousands of tourists visit there every year.