DayGuide AI is an AI-powered activity planning platform for nursing homes, adult day centers, assisted living, memory care units, and families caring for loved ones at home. It helps activity directors and caregivers generate personalized, inclusive programming — crafts, games, exercises, and more — without storing any Protected Health Information (PHI).
Platform Features
Nova AI Assistant: An intelligent AI assistant trained for day centers, nursing homes, and care homes. Features Smart Planning, Content Generation, Nova's Marketplace, and Budget with Nova.
Activities Module: Whiteboard, Smart Picks, Theme Packs, Spot the Difference, Creative & Crafts, Baking, Social, Movement, Memory, Mindfulness, Cognitive, Short Story Activities.
Games Module: Trivia, Word Scramble, Bingo, Visual Detective, Name That Tune, Hangman, Price Is Right, Family Feud, Jeopardy, Guess That Animal, Name That Object, Deal or No Deal.
Daily Chronicles: Personalized daily generated content for reflection and engagement. Printable and screen-ready.
Pass Time Station: Self-guided activities — Brain Games, Coloring Pages, Word Puzzles, Memory Page Games.
Participant / Resident Profiles: Non-PHI profile system. Personalized daily plans, engagement reports, birthday detection, content library.
Menus & Calendars: Menu Calendar, Menu Generator, Activities Calendar.
Events & Programs: Birthday parties, family events, community partnerships, staff morale events, fundraisers, multi-week programs.
Spiritual Reflections: Optional topic-based Bible studies and spiritual content for faith-based programs.
Field Trip Finder: Local destinations for group outings with full itineraries and accessibility notes.
DayGuide AI Design Studio: Create flyers, posters, newsletters, and documents. No design skills needed.
Reporting & Analytics: Track activity usage, review engagement trends, social media guidance.
Exercises: YouTube video library and AI-generated personalized exercise plans with countdown timer, music suggestions, and print options.
Blog
Expert insights for activity directors, caregivers, and senior care professionals.
View all blog posts
Category: Activities | Date: May 20, 2026
Engaging individuals living with dementia requires creativity, patience, and the right tools. Here are 10 proven activity ideas that spark joy, reduce anxiety, and foster meaningful connection.
Activities covered: Reminiscence Conversations, Sensory Bins, Adapted Bingo, Folding and Sorting Tasks, Music and Movement, Gardening and Nature, Arts and Crafts, Cooking and Baking, Animal-Assisted Activities, Storytelling and Life Review. Tips: keep sessions 20-30 minutes, match activities to time of day, focus on success, be flexible. DayGuide AI generates ability-adaptive activities tailored to your group in seconds.
Category: Staff Wellbeing | Date: May 18, 2026
Caregiver burnout is one of the most serious challenges in senior care. Learn the warning signs, root causes, and practical strategies that help activity directors and care staff thrive long-term.
Warning signs include emotional exhaustion, depersonalization, reduced sense of accomplishment, physical symptoms, and dread. Root causes: administrative overload, isolation, undervaluation, emotional weight. Strategies: automate administrative load with AI tools, build peer support networks, set boundaries around work hours, celebrate small victories, advocate for staffing, prioritize physical health. DayGuide AI reduces the administrative burden that contributes to burnout.
Category: AI & Technology | Date: May 15, 2026
Artificial intelligence is transforming how senior care facilities plan, deliver, and document activity programming. Here is what the technology actually does — and what it does not.
AI can: generate personalized activity content, create programming materials (newsletters, flyers, calendars), support cognitive engagement, assist with documentation, and inform programming decisions through analytics. AI cannot replace human presence, make clinical judgments, or know your participants at a personal level. DayGuide AI uses Zero PHI architecture — no medical data stored. Facilities report 10+ hours saved per week, more consistent programming, reduced staff burnout, and higher participant engagement.
Category: Planning | Date: May 12, 2026
A great activity calendar is more than a scheduling tool — it is a communication piece, a marketing asset, and a window into the quality of your program.
Effective calendars balance cognitive, physical, social, creative, spiritual, and sensory domains. Tips: start with anchor activities, theme months thoughtfully, plan for flexibility, involve participants, use the calendar as a communication tool. DayGuide AI can generate a full month of domain-balanced programming in minutes.
Category: Family Caregiving | Date: May 8, 2026
Caring for a loved one with dementia or cognitive decline at home is one of the most demanding roles a person can take on. Practical strategies for creating structure, joy, and connection every day.
Key topics: importance of daily structure for dementia, calm morning routines, meaningful activity ideas (photo albums, folding laundry, gardening, music, simple puzzles, cooking), managing sundowning and agitation (redirect rather than correct, reduce stimulation), caregiver self-care. Resources: Alzheimer's Association 1-800-272-3900, Caregiver Action Network, AARP. DayGuide AI Family Essentials plan provides AI-powered activities for home caregivers at $39/month.
Category: Best Practices | Date: May 5, 2026
Person-centered care is one of the most cited principles in senior care — but what does it actually mean in practice for activity directors? A concrete framework for putting the principle into action.
Person-centered care means programming that reflects individual interests, adapts to individual ability levels, respects individual choices, and recognizes the whole person. Building participant profiles (life history, interests, cultural background, communication style, preferred activity types) is the foundation. Group programming can still be person-centered through choices within the group, real-time adaptation, and individual supplementation. DayGuide AI's participant profile system captures interests and preferences without storing PHI or medical diagnoses.
Category: Activities | Date: May 28, 2026
Bingo is a powerful tool for cognitive engagement, social connection, and joyful participation for individuals with dementia. It operates on recognition rather than recall — a cognitive strength that remains intact late in the dementia journey.
Cognitive benefits: pattern recognition, sustained attention, processing speed practice, working memory. Social benefits: shared excitement, emotional safety, procedural memory activation. Adaptations: large-print cards for mild dementia; picture bingo (3x3 grid) for advanced dementia; mixed-ability groups with varied card versions. Tips: calm environment, enthusiastic caller, themed versions (seasonal, cultural, decade), watch for frustration. DayGuide AI generates custom bingo cards instantly.
Category: Activities | Date: May 26, 2026
Chair-based exercise is one of the most accessible, evidence-supported forms of physical activity for seniors. Regular movement improves balance, reduces fall risk, maintains muscle strength, and benefits mood and cognitive function.
Evidence: chair programs improve upper/lower body strength, flexibility, balance, mood, and social engagement. Movement categories: upper body (shoulder rolls, arm raises, bicep curls), lower body (marching, ankle circles, leg extensions), core (side bends, torso twists), cool-down (neck rolls, deep breathing). Safety tips: always warm up, cue clearly, watch for overexertion, use music, cool down properly, celebrate effort. Adapt for limited mobility by focusing on breathing; for advanced dementia simplify to 3-4 movements. DayGuide AI provides AI-generated exercise plans with YouTube videos and timers.
Category: Planning | Date: May 24, 2026
Good activity documentation demonstrates program quality, supports person-centered care, provides regulatory compliance evidence, and creates institutional memory that survives staff turnover.
Regulatory requirements typically include: assessment documentation, participation records, engagement notes, care plan integration, calendar documentation. Each session record should capture: activity name and type, date/time/duration, number of participants, description of what occurred, notable individual responses, facilitating staff. Individual tracking: activities attended vs. offered, engagement level, behavioral observations, preferences revealed. Efficiency tips: document immediately after the session, use templates, involve the whole team, use technology. DayGuide AI's analytics features track participation and engagement trends over time.
Category: Activities | Date: May 22, 2026
Music memory is stored differently in the brain and is often among the last affected by Alzheimer's disease and other dementias. Familiar music activates memory, emotion, motor function, and language simultaneously.
Benefits: reduces agitation and anxiety (often more effectively than medication), improves mood and emotional wellbeing, supports communication, enhances motor function, facilitates social connection. Choosing music: most powerful is music from ages 15-25; ask family members; observe responses. Practical activities: personalized playlist sessions, sing-alongs with large-print lyrics, music and movement, musical reminiscence, percussion instrument exploration. Board-certified music therapists (MT-BC) provide clinical music therapy beyond activity programming. DayGuide AI generates themed music activity plans and era-matched song suggestions.
Category: Best Practices | Date: May 20, 2026
Family involvement improves participant wellbeing, builds trust with the facility, and creates a richer care experience. Families are a powerful source of life history information, participation, and program advocacy.
Information partnership: conduct a life history conversation with family within first two weeks of admission to surface interests, traditions, music, foods, and what to avoid. Participation opportunities: family events (birthday celebrations, holiday gatherings), volunteer roles (reading, facilitating crafts, accompanying outings), intergenerational programs, virtual participation options. Communication: monthly activity newsletters, personalized participation updates, regular feedback mechanisms. Navigating difficult dynamics: focus communication on participant observations supported by data. DayGuide AI's Design Studio creates polished family newsletters and calendars.
Category: Activities | Date: May 18, 2026
When verbal communication and complex engagement become difficult, sensory activities offer a powerful path to connection and comfort. The sensory system remains more intact than language or reasoning in advanced dementia.
Five senses as pathways: Touch (tactile boxes, hand massage, familiar objects, weighted blankets); Smell (aromatherapy, baking aromas, scent boxes with herbs and spices); Sound (personalized music playlists, nature soundscapes, family voice recordings, percussion instruments); Sight (photo books, calming videos, high-contrast art, watching fish or birds); Taste (small tastes of favorite foods, food-themed sensory activities, familiar comfort foods). Session design principles: start with individual preferences, create calm environment, move slowly, follow the participant's lead, document what works. DayGuide AI generates customized sensory activity plans tailored to individual profiles and ability levels.