
AIO Solutions — Family Care Services
AIO Solutions — Family Care Services

From needs assessment and integrated care to homecoming support, we walk with every family toward a stable long-term care life.
AIO Solutions
What is the AIO Solution?
An integrated, person-centered care model
AIO comes from founder Lin Yi-ying’s “All In One” care philosophy: good care starts from each person’s needs, integrating medical, care, community, and daily-life resources to connect the support needed at every stage — building humane long-term care with more complete support.

Family Care Services
How family care services work
Starting from understanding, accompanying every care journey
Family caregiving pressure quietly affects personal life — and work roles too.
Some are arranging care after a family member’s discharge; some feel lost facing dementia and long-term care; others shuttle between work and caregiving. Care needs change as family situations change, bringing new challenges and choices.
With the AIO integrated care model at the core, we start by understanding your needs, then connect the care resources and support systems required — helping families find the right way to care, and helping companies build care-friendly support for employees.
We believe care should not be carried alone. Through professional teams and resource integration, we find safer, more sustainable care solutions together.
Whatever care situation you are facing, you can book a consultation directly and let us help you find a fitting care plan.
Personal AIO Service
Personal AIO Services
Every family’s care situation is different — preparing for discharge, facing dementia care, or easing long-term caregiving pressure. Many share the same confusion: not knowing whom to ask, what resources exist, or how to arrange care in time.
Personal AIO services are built on the All In One integrated care model — from needs assessment and care planning to resource connection and ongoing companionship — helping families find their own way to care with less trial and error.
When care needs arise,no one has to face them alone
“My father was just discharged. The hospital says he can go home, but I have no idea how to care for him.”
“Working while caring for my mother, I haven’t slept well for a long time. I don’t know how much longer I can hold on.”
Discharge-to-home support
Bridging care arrangements after returning home
Long-term care planning
Discussing care directions based on needs
Medical & care resource integration
Connecting medical, LTC, and community systems
Cross-disciplinary teamwork
Integrating professional roles to respond to care needs
Ongoing follow-up
Accompanying families through care challenges




