A calm, friendly place for your loved one to spend the day

CPM Day Care provides adult day care in a setting that feels more like a welcoming café than a care environment. It is calm, comfortable and familiar, but still full of conversation, laughter, activity and ordinary human connection.

We support adults who benefit from companionship, routine, gentle structure and meaningful activity during the day. We also support families and carers who want reassurance that their loved one is spending time somewhere safe, kind and properly considered.

Support that feels personal, not institutional

Choosing day care can feel like a big step. For many families, it comes at a point where your loved one is becoming more isolated, a carer is becoming tired, or everyone knows that a little more structure and support would help.

Our approach is deliberately calm and human. Your loved one can talk, take part in activities, enjoy food and refreshments, sit quietly when they want to, and build familiar routines at their own pace. Good day care should not feel forced. It should feel like a natural part of the week.

We aim to create the sort of environment families would be comfortable walking into themselves. Quiet enough to feel settled. Warm enough to feel sociable. Professional enough to give confidence.

Our services

Every family comes to day care for a slightly different reason. Some are looking for companionship. Some need dementia support. Some need carer respite. Others simply want a safe, welcoming place where their loved one can enjoy regular time with other people.

Specialist support

Dementia Support

Day care can be very valuable for people living with dementia. Familiar routines, gentle activity, conversation, music, food, memory prompts and a calm environment can all help your loved one feel more settled and connected.

Read about dementia support

Routine and confidence

Learning Disability and Autism Support

We support adults who live with a learning disability, autism, or both. The focus is on routine, confidence, social opportunity and meaningful activity, while respecting your loved one’s own pace, preferences and way of communicating.

Read about learning disability and autism support

Support for you too

Family and Carer Support

Day care supports the whole family. It can give carers time to rest, work, attend appointments or simply recover. It also gives families a regular point of contact with people who understand adult care and the pressures that often come with it.

Support for families and carers

A good day out

Activities

Activities are part of the rhythm of the day, but they are never just there for show. They are chosen to encourage conversation, confidence, movement, memory, enjoyment and a sense of ordinary community life.

View activities

Clear information

Fees and Funding

Families often need clear information about costs and funding. We aim to explain this plainly, including private payment, local authority involvement and the practical questions families usually need to consider.

Understand fees and funding

Helpful guidance

Blog and Guidance

Our blog is there for families who want practical guidance before making decisions. We cover day care, dementia, carer support, funding, family concerns and common questions about adult care.

Read our blog

Is day care right for your family?

Day care may be right where your loved one would benefit from regular companionship, a calm routine, a reason to get out of the house, or a safe place to spend time during the day.

It may also be right where a family carer is doing a great deal already and needs reliable time to rest, work, manage appointments or simply have some breathing space.

You do not need to know exactly what support is needed before speaking to us. A conversation is often the easiest place to begin.

It may be worth speaking to us if:

  • Your loved one is becoming lonely, withdrawn or less active.
  • A family carer needs regular time to rest or manage other responsibilities.
  • There has been a dementia diagnosis and the family is looking for calm, structured support.
  • Your loved one would enjoy conversation, activities and a more social day.
  • The family is exploring care options but does not feel ready for residential care.
  • Your loved one would benefit from routine, reassurance and gentle encouragement.

What happens when you contact us

Families do not always know what to ask at the beginning. That is completely normal. We will talk through the situation with you, explain how day care works, and help you decide whether it feels like the right next step.

1

You get in touch

You can contact us by phone, email or enquiry form. You only need to give us a brief outline of the situation.

2

We listen and understand

We talk through your loved one’s needs, family circumstances, current support and what you are hoping day care may help with.

3

We explain the options clearly

We explain available sessions, fees, funding routes where relevant, and what the next steps would usually look like.

4

We arrange a visit where appropriate

Where day care may be suitable, we can arrange a visit so you can see the setting, meet the team and get a proper feel for the atmosphere.

5

We agree the right way forward

If day care feels right, we agree how support should begin. If it does not feel right, we will still try to point you in the right direction.

Visit Victoria Day Care Centre

Victoria Day Care Centre is our directly operated adult day care centre in Thornton Cleveleys. It has a calm café feel, with space for conversation, quiet moments, activities, food, refreshments and laughter throughout the day.

If you are looking for day care locally, visiting Victoria Day Care Centre is often the best way to understand what we offer. You can see the environment for yourself and decide whether it feels right for your family.

Come in and see whether it feels right

Whether you are looking for dementia support, learning disability and autism support, carer respite, activities, or general guidance about day care, we can help you understand the options without pressure.

A visit is often the simplest way to decide whether the centre feels right for your loved one and your family.