We believe the best place to heal, thrive, and feel safe is at home. That’s why we provide personalized private nursing care with compassion, dignity, and respect — helping clients and families receive skilled, one-on-one support from a licensed nurse where they feel most comfortable.
“I can do all things through Christ who strengthens me.” — Philippians 4:13
Reach out to discuss your needs, concerns, and goals for care at home.
We’ll talk through the type of support needed and determine the best next steps for your situation.
Personalized private nursing support is provided with professionalism, dignity, and respect.
All care is provided by licensed nurses, giving clients and families added confidence and peace of mind.
Care is tailored to each client’s needs, goals, home setting, and level of support needed.
Families are kept informed with a thoughtful, supportive approach that helps reduce stress and uncertainty.
Clients can receive skilled, one-on-one support in the place they know best, with dignity and comfort.
Private nursing offers a more personalized, higher level of in-home support for clients and families who want skilled care delivered with professionalism, consistency, and compassion. At Nurse Kaysha Home Health Services, all care is provided by licensed nurses, giving families more individualized attention, stronger clinical support, and greater peace of mind at home.
Thoughtful in-home nursing support tailored to the needs of clients and families.
Personalized nursing support to promote comfort, safety, and healing at home after surgery.
Personalized support for recovery and seasons of life when extra help at home is needed.
Short-term nursing support that gives family caregivers time to rest and recharge.
Comfort-focused nursing support for clients and families during serious illness and end-of-life care.
Families can expect compassionate communication, personalized attention, and care delivered with professionalism, dignity, and respect. We understand that every situation is different, and support is tailored to each client’s needs, goals, and home environment. You do not need to have everything figured out before reaching out — we are here to talk through your concerns and help you understand the next steps.
Caring for others has always been more than a profession to me — it is my calling. That is what inspired me to create Nurse Kaysha Home Health Services, where care is personalized, private, and designed around the unique needs of each client and family. With 20 years in healthcare and 9 years as a licensed nurse, I am committed to providing thoughtful, one-on-one care with professionalism, compassion, and respect at home.
As a Case Manager Nurse, I help families understand what is happening, prioritize what matters most, and navigate care in a way that feels practical and manageable at home. I believe care should never feel one-size-fits-all. Every client deserves to feel seen, supported, and treated with dignity, and every family deserves clear communication and compassionate guidance along the way.
I am committed to building a team of licensed nurses who reflect the same standards of professionalism, compassion, and quality care that Nurse Kaysha Home Health Services was founded on. I believe every nurse brings different strengths, and every client and family has their own needs, preferences, and personality. Good care is not just about credentials — it is also about trust, communication, and the right fit. That is why I take pride in thoughtfully pairing clients with nurses whose strengths, presence, and approach best align with their care needs and home environment.
Comfort-focused nursing support for clients and families during serious illness and end-of-life care.
View DetailsPersonalized in-home nursing support during cancer treatment, recovery, and related care needs.
View DetailsOngoing nursing support for clients managing chronic health needs at home.
View DetailsPersonalized support for clients in appropriate situations who may benefit from added structure and reassurance at home.
View DetailsPersonalized nursing support to promote comfort, safety, and healing at home after surgery.
View DetailsIn-home consultations and medication support to bring clarity, safety, and peace of mind.
View DetailsThoughtful companionship and support focused on comfort, presence, and quality of life.
View DetailsShort-term nursing support to give family caregivers rest, reassurance, and continuity of care.
View DetailsPersonalized support during times of change, including hospital-to-home transitions and added nursing support at home.
View DetailsPersonalized nursing support for clients recovering from or living with the effects of stroke.
View DetailsFlexible in-home nursing support for clients who may need longer visits or more ongoing care.
View DetailsPersonalized nursing support for clients with special care needs at home.
View DetailsFamilies reach out when a loved one needs more support at home — whether after surgery, during serious illness, or at times when comfort and peace of mind matter most. For many, that first call comes through a personal referral, reflecting the trust built through thoughtful, compassionate care.
We are accepting applications for compassionate, dependable nurses who are committed to safe, high-quality care in the home.
At Nurse Kaysha Home Health Services, you’ll join a nurse-led team focused on dignity, professionalism, communication, and personalized care for every client we serve.
We welcome applications from Registered Nurses (RNs) and Licensed Practical Nurses (LPNs).
Complete the interest form below, then email your resume and any supporting documents to begin the application process.
Please note: Qualified applicants must successfully complete required screening, including a background check, required state registry checks, and a drug test.
Submitting this form does not guarantee employment. Qualified applicants may be required to complete additional screening, credential verification, and onboarding requirements.
Email: care@nursekaysha.com
Phone: (307) 249‑6674
For the best results, applicants should also email their resume directly to care@nursekaysha.com. File uploads through website mail forms may depend on the browser or hosting platform.
We welcome nurses who value one-on-one care, patient safety, professionalism, and meaningful support in the home setting.
You do not need to have everything figured out before reaching out. We’re here to answer questions, talk through your situation, and help guide the next steps.
Who it’s for: Individuals receiving hospice or end-of-life care and families who need compassionate, skilled nursing support focused on comfort, dignity, and emotional reassurance at home.
What support looks like: We provide comfort-focused hospice support that reinforces hospice team care plans, monitors symptom changes, supports medication comfort routines, and helps families feel confident, supported, and present during end-of-life care. Our services complement hospice teams by providing additional bedside support and caregiver relief.
Monitor pain, breathing changes, anxiety, restlessness, and comfort levels while supporting hospice-directed care plans.
Assist with comfort medication routines, observe effectiveness, and help families understand medication timing and symptom relief goals.
Support repositioning, skin monitoring, and comfort positioning to reduce discomfort and protect skin integrity.
Provide calm support during breathing changes and help families understand common end-of-life respiratory patterns.
Assist bathing, grooming, oral care, and hygiene with gentle, respectful care that prioritizes comfort and dignity.
Provide reassurance, education about the end-of-life process, and coaching to help families feel prepared and supported.
Provide calm, attentive presence so families can rest while their loved one remains supported and comfortable.
Observe subtle changes in comfort, alertness, breathing, or circulation and communicate updates to families and hospice providers.
Provide supportive presence during active end-of-life stages, helping families understand changes and remain present with their loved one.
Who it’s for: Families and caregivers who need short-term relief while a loved one remains safe, supported, and comfortable at home.
What support looks like: We step in with dependable, respectful nursing support that maintains routines, safety, and emotional reassurance—allowing caregivers time to rest, work, attend appointments, or focus on their own well-being while knowing their loved one is in skilled, compassionate hands.
Provide reliable in-home nursing support so family caregivers can rest, manage responsibilities, or take needed breaks with peace of mind.
Attentive supervision, fall-risk monitoring, and safety awareness while maintaining familiar routines and comfort.
Assist with hygiene, toileting, dressing, mobility reminders, and daily structure while promoting dignity and independence.
Support medication routines, monitor for changes in health or behavior, and communicate concerns to families and care teams as needed.
Prepare meals/snacks and support hydration to help maintain recovery routines and medication tolerance.
Assist with dishes, laundry, tidying, and maintaining a clean, comfortable environment during respite visits.
Assist with pharmacy pickups, groceries, or recovery-related supplies as arranged to reduce caregiver stress.
Provide engaging conversation, calming presence, and emotional support that reduces isolation and promotes well-being.
Maintain consistent routines and provide updates to families so care transitions remain smooth and organized.
Who it’s for: Individuals undergoing cancer treatment (chemotherapy, radiation, or immunotherapy) or recovery who need symptom monitoring, medication support, and coordinated home nursing care.
What support looks like: We provide skilled, compassionate oncology nursing support focused on treatment side-effect monitoring, symptom management, immune safety, and coordinated care—helping clients stay safe and supported between oncology visits while reducing caregiver stress.
Help clients safely pace daily activities, prioritize essential tasks, and conserve energy during chemotherapy, radiation, or recovery phases.
Prepare easy-to-tolerate meals, support hydration, and monitor appetite or weight changes related to treatment side effects.
Support complex medication routines (anti-nausea, pain, steroids, supportive meds) while monitoring effectiveness, tolerance, and side effects.
Support infection control routines and monitor early warning signs such as fever or sudden illness risk in immunocompromised clients.
Maintain accurate medication lists, treatment schedules, allergy lists, and symptom logs to support oncology team decision-making.
Support safe movement, transfers, and fall prevention during treatment-related weakness, dizziness, or neuropathy symptoms.
Help organize questions, track symptoms, and reinforce oncology instructions to improve communication with providers.
Monitor for concerning changes (dehydration, severe fatigue, infection risk, medication reactions) and communicate concerns early.
Provide calm companionship and reassurance through treatment days, recovery periods, and adjustment—supporting comfort and dignity.
Who it’s for: Individuals recovering after surgery who need support with mobility, routines, and safe healing at home.
What support looks like: We reduce strain during recovery with practical nursing support, safety monitoring, and consistent routines—reinforcing discharge instructions, watching for complications, and helping clients regain strength with confidence.
Support walking, transfers, stair navigation, and safe movement based on post-op restrictions and recovery guidelines.
Monitor surgical sites for redness, swelling, drainage, or infection concerns and communicate changes to families and providers.
Support medication routines, monitor for side effects, and observe for warning signs such as infection, clot risk, or adverse reactions.
Assist with positioning, rest routines, swelling management, and comfort measures that support healing and reduce strain.
Assist with bathing, dressing, and personal care tasks while protecting surgical sites and maintaining post-op precautions.
Support meals and hydration that promote recovery, medication tolerance, and energy restoration.
Help clients follow recovery instructions, therapy plans, and activity restrictions while building confidence at home.
Help organize follow-up appointments, therapy schedules, and recovery tracking so changes are noticed early and communicated clearly.
Watch for concerning changes such as fever, increasing pain, shortness of breath, unusual swelling, or wound changes and help guide next steps.
Teach caregivers safe support techniques, expected healing timelines, and warning signs that require medical attention.
Who it’s for: Individuals managing long-term health conditions such as heart failure, COPD, diabetes, neurological disorders, or complex multi-condition care who need consistent nursing monitoring, education, and routine support to maintain stability at home.
What support looks like: We provide proactive chronic care nursing focused on symptom monitoring, medication management, lifestyle coaching, and early detection of complications—helping clients stay stable, prevent hospitalizations, and remain safely supported between provider visits.
Track disease-related symptoms such as breathing changes, swelling, fatigue, blood sugar trends, neurological changes, or blood pressure concerns.
Support complex medication routines, monitor response to treatment, and watch for side effects or medication-related complications.
Monitor weight, oxygen levels, blood pressure, glucose trends, and other key indicators to support provider decision-making.
Identify warning signs of worsening conditions and help guide timely communication with healthcare providers.
Provide education on nutrition, activity pacing, energy conservation, and daily habits that support long-term condition stability.
Reinforce care plans, monitor subtle decline, and support early intervention to help reduce emergency visits or hospitalizations.
Support communication between clients, families, and medical providers to maintain alignment with evolving treatment plans.
Provide caregiver education, progression awareness, and guidance to help families confidently support chronic condition management.
Who it’s for: Clients who would benefit from social connection and practical in-home help to stay safe and supported.
What support looks like: Nurse-provided companionship combines meaningful social connection, safety-aware support, and encouragement to stay engaged in life. We support daily routines, enjoyable activities, and safe outings—helping clients continue doing the things they love while monitoring comfort, mobility, and overall well-being.
Provide meaningful companionship—conversation, reading, games, music, or calming activities tailored to the client’s interests and energy level.
Support consistent daily structure—wake-up routines, reminders, activity pacing, and encouragement to stay engaged safely.
While spending time together, watch for trip hazards, fall risk, and changes in balance or mobility—supporting a safer home environment.
Prepare meals/snacks and support hydration, including shared mealtimes if desired, while encouraging safe positioning and pacing.
Support safe walking and transfers so clients can participate in daily life with confidence and reduced fear of falling.
Offer calm presence during anxiety, grief, confusion, or agitation—with gentle redirection and comfort-focused support.
Share observations and patterns with family/caregivers to support peace of mind and coordinated routines.
Because we’re nurses, we notice early signs of decline or complications and communicate concerns to families and the care team as needed.
Support safe participation in hobbies, community activities, appointments, walks, shopping trips, social visits, or favorite outings—helping clients stay connected, independent, and emotionally fulfilled.
Encourage participation in favorite hobbies such as crafts, music, gardening, games, memory activities, or spiritual and cultural routines that support joy and emotional well-being.
Who it’s for: Clients and families who want a higher-touch nursing relationship with practical in-home support, medication oversight, wellness check-ins, care coordination, and trusted clinical guidance between provider visits.
What support looks like: Concierge nursing offers personalized, nurse-led support tailored to the client’s goals, routines, and health needs. It can include medication help, wellness observation, appointment preparation, family communication, and day-to-day coordination that makes home care feel more organized, responsive, and reassuring.
Help set up clear routines for reminders, tracking, and safe medication follow-through in the home.
Explain care routines in plain language and help families feel prepared and supported.
Assist with organizing schedules, questions for providers, follow-up plans, and practical next steps after appointments.
Review medication routines for accuracy, monitor for side effects or interactions, and help clients and families understand when to contact providers about concerns.
Assist with pharmacy pickups and basic coordination as arranged.
Create or update an accurate medication list, allergy list, and “quick reference” care notes so families can share clear information with providers and caregivers.
Provide ongoing nursing observation and check-ins to catch concerns early and help clients feel supported between provider visits.
Help families gather questions, share updates, and stay aligned before and after important visits.
Who it’s for: Clients returning home from hospital/rehab or moving between levels of care who need continuity and support.
What support looks like: We help make the transition smoother—supporting routines, safety, and practical home help as clients settle in.
Help prepare the space—clear pathways, organize essentials, and support a safer environment.
Help follow the discharge routine and keep schedules consistent in the first days at home.
Prepare meals/snacks and support hydration to help stabilize recovery routines and medication tolerance.
Organize discharge instructions, medication changes, follow-up plans, and key care notes so the move home feels clear, safe, and easier for families to manage.
Assist with essential pickups such as groceries, pharmacy needs, and recovery supplies (as arranged).
Support safe movement and transfers as clients rebuild strength, confidence, and independence after discharge.
Provide reassurance and share observations with family/caregivers for peace of mind.
Help coordinate routines and communicate questions/concerns to the care team as needed.
Who it’s for: Individuals living with memory changes (including dementia and Alzheimer’s disease) and families who want steady, respectful, and safety-focused support at home.
What support looks like: We prioritize safety, calm routines, and person-centered communication—supporting memory function, reducing anxiety and behavioral stress, and helping families maintain meaningful connection while navigating cognitive decline and dementia progression.
Support safe movement, reduce fall and wandering risks, and help maintain a calm, secure home environment tailored to dementia-related safety concerns.
Assist with hygiene, meals, hydration, and daily tasks using gentle cueing, redirection, and consistent routines that support independence and reduce confusion.
Use calm, person-centered dementia care strategies to reduce anxiety, agitation, sundowning, and frustration while preserving dignity and emotional connection.
Support memory-friendly activities such as reminiscence conversation, familiar routines, simple games, music therapy support, and sensory engagement.
Assist bathing, grooming, toileting, and dressing using memory-support techniques that reduce distress and preserve self-esteem.
Monitor eating patterns, support safe mealtime routines, and watch for weight loss, swallowing concerns, or dehydration risks common in cognitive decline.
Provide calming evening structure and reassurance during late-day confusion, agitation, or behavioral changes.
Observe subtle changes in cognition, mood, sleep patterns, mobility, or safety awareness and communicate updates to families and healthcare providers.
Provide caregiver communication strategies, behavioral guidance, and education about dementia progression to support long-term home safety and confidence.
Who it’s for: Individuals recovering after a stroke who need nursing support for safety, routines, and rehabilitation goals.
What support looks like: We reinforce therapy plans, monitor changes, and help families feel confident supporting recovery at home.
Support safe mobility, transfer training, fall‑risk monitoring, and home safety guidance to help individuals regain confidence while reducing injury risk.
Monitor blood pressure, medication adherence, blood sugar when needed, and watch for early warning signs of stroke complications or recurrence.
Reinforce physical, occupational, and speech therapy exercises between visits while monitoring fatigue, progress, and safe assistive device use.
Support modified diet plans, hydration monitoring, safe feeding positioning, and observation for swallowing or aspiration concerns.
Provide routine reinforcement, orientation support, and compassionate care for memory changes, frustration, anxiety, or post‑stroke depression.
Assist with repositioning, skin monitoring, pressure injury prevention, and circulation or swelling observation during recovery.
Support toileting, hygiene, grooming, and adaptive daily living techniques to help individuals safely rebuild independence.
Teach safe caregiving techniques, recovery expectations, and warning signs while helping families feel confident supporting recovery at home.
Who it’s for: Clients who need a higher level of sustained in-home nursing support due to complex medical needs, recovery needs, safety concerns, end-of-life support, or times when a family caregiver needs additional help.
What support looks like: We provide extended in-home nursing support focused on safety, comfort, symptom observation, personal care needs, and caregiver peace of mind—helping families maintain stability at home when a higher level of support is needed.
Continuous awareness and safety support through the night—fall prevention, safe mobility help, wandering prevention when needed, and early detection of changes.
Support medication schedules per the plan of care, monitor symptoms, and communicate concerns or changes to family/care team promptly.
Assist with repositioning, comfort measures, and skin protection to promote rest, prevent pressure areas, and maintain dignity.
Respectful assistance with toileting, incontinence care, hygiene needs, and hydration reminders when appropriate—supporting a calm overnight routine.
Calm support for anxiety, confusion, or nighttime agitation (including dementia-related behaviors), with gentle redirection and safety-focused routines.
As appropriate and within scope: tube feeding monitoring, oxygen/CPAP observation, catheter monitoring, glucose checks, wound observation, or post-hospital recovery support.
Reliable overnight coverage so family caregivers can sleep—knowing someone trained is present, alert, and ready to respond.
Clear overnight notes and updates to support continuity of care, smoother mornings, and aligned communication with the care team.
Support for individuals with developmental, physical, or complex care needs—delivered with safety, dignity, and clear communication with families and the care team.
What support looks like: Direct, hands-on nursing support plus planning, education, and advocacy—tailored to the individual’s goals, routines, and environment.
Expanded roles and additional duties: For rural communities, support may include travel/outreach, environmental safety checks, caregiver training, documentation, and coordination across school, workplace, and community settings.
Hands-on nursing support with daily routines, symptom checks, and health coaching—tailored to the individual’s goals and care plan.
Coordinate care plans, providers, referrals, and services so everyone stays aligned—family, school/work, and the healthcare team.
Support informed choices and self-advocacy; provide family education on conditions, equipment, medications, and safe routines.
Help build confidence and skills for participation in community, school, or work settings—while maintaining safety and dignity.
De-escalation, safety planning, and coordination with providers/behavioral supports to reduce risk and support calm routines.
Care for complex needs (as trained/ordered) such as seizure monitoring, feeding support, mobility assistance, and equipment oversight.
Home/school/workplace safety checks: fall prevention, accessibility, infection control basics, and emergency preparedness.
Accurate visit notes, care logs, and coordination documentation to support continuity of care and required compliance standards.
Teach families/caregivers safe transfers, routines, equipment use, medication organization, and “what to do if” scenarios.
Rural travel support and outreach—appointments, school/work coordination, and in-person check-ins when telehealth isn’t enough.