Elder Care Mediation · Texas

Elder Care
Mediation in Texas

Compassionate Facilitation for Families · Virtual Statewide

Family reaching agreement on elder care with mediator Lynnette Nadeau Texas

Decisions about an aging parent's care are among the most emotionally complex conversations a family can have. When siblings disagree about living arrangements, medical decisions, financial management, or caregiving responsibilities, the stress can fracture relationships that have lasted a lifetime.

Elder care mediation provides a structured, neutral space for these conversations — one where everyone can be heard and where the focus stays on finding solutions that honor your loved one's wishes.

Family members in conflict over elder care decisions Texas — mediation helps resolve disagreements
Before Mediation
Family smiling together after elder care mediation agreement Texas — Lynnette Nadeau mediator
After Mediation

Mediation changes the story


What Elder Care Mediation Covers

  • Living arrangement decisions — aging in place, assisted living, memory care
  • Medical care and end-of-life planning discussions
  • Financial management and power of attorney disputes
  • Caregiver responsibilities and compensation
  • Sibling conflicts over who is doing what
  • Disagreements about selling or managing a family home
  • Communication breakdowns between family members and care facilities

Why Families Choose Mediation

Elder care decisions are rarely black and white. Mediation acknowledges that complexity and gives everyone a voice — including, whenever possible, the aging parent themselves.

  • All perspectives are heard — not just the loudest voice in the room
  • Preserves family relationships during a difficult time
  • Keeps decisions out of probate court or adult protective services
  • Can include the aging parent as an active participant
  • Confidential — family matters stay private
  • Conducted via Zoom — no travel required

Common Questions About Elder Care Mediation

Yes, and in most cases we encourage it when they are willing and able. The mediation is ultimately about their life, and their voice deserves to be heard.
All sessions are conducted via Zoom, so family members can participate from anywhere without the cost or logistics of travel.
Written agreements from mediation can be drafted as legally binding contracts. I recommend consulting with an attorney if the agreement involves significant financial or legal decisions.
Mediation requires willing participation. However, sometimes a conversation with each party separately — before any joint session — helps reluctant family members understand the benefits and agree to participate.