Appointments · Errands · Presence
Senior transportation support, with someone alongside you.
For most families, transportation is where the stress actually lives. The appointment is Tuesday at 10. The adult child is in Seattle. The parent can still drive in theory, but shouldn’t, or can’t anymore, and the family has been rearranging schedules around every appointment for months. Uber covers the ride, but not the thirty minutes in the waiting room, or the handoff to a nurse, or the question nobody remembered to ask the doctor.
Transportation with a caregiver isn’t a ride. It’s a person with your parent, from the front door to the appointment and back, who pays attention and reports back. It also isn’t medical transport. It’s caregiver-accompanied transportation for appointments, errands, and follow-ups when someone needs support, presence, and another set of eyes.
Licensed · Bonded · Insured
California HCO #074700244
Founded 2026
Small on purpose. Staying that way.
Owner-led
Every consultation is with the owner, personally.
Serving the East Bay
Contra Costa · Alameda · Solano
What it looks like
What transportation with a caregiver actually means.
The ride is the smallest part of it. The rest is what happens before the car leaves, what happens in the waiting room, and what the family hears afterward.
It’s one of the services where a caregiver earns their keep in a single afternoon — especially for families who aren’t local.
Door-to-door, not curb-to-curb.
Help getting out of the house, into the car, into the building. Not a drop-off.
Waiting during the appointment.
In the waiting room, or in the exam room if the client wants someone there — not circling the block.
The drive home, and the settling in.
Back in the house, shoes off, a glass of water, anything from the appointment put where it needs to be.
Bringing the right questions in.
I can help the family think through what to ask before the appointment — and make sure those questions don’t get lost.
Notes from what was actually said.
What the doctor told the client, what the client probably didn’t fully hear, what follow-ups were ordered — written down and sent to the family.
Picking up prescriptions and paperwork.
Part of the trip, not a separate errand someone has to chase the next day.
When it’s the right fit
The situations we hear from most.
Families reach out about transportation in a few recurring patterns. If any of these sound familiar, it’s probably worth a conversation.
Medical appointments are stacking up.
Cardiology one week, ophthalmology the next, physical therapy twice a week. The adult child is burning PTO on appointments, or the spouse is driving when they shouldn’t be.
Driving isn’t safe anymore, and no one’s said it out loud.
The car has new dents. Navigation has gotten harder. The conversation about taking the keys is one the family has been dreading. A caregiver with a car is often how that transition actually works.
Adult children are far away.
They’d come for every appointment if they could. They can’t. A caregiver in the exam room who sends notes afterward is the next best thing — and sometimes better.
Errands and a normal life.
The grocery store, a haircut, lunch out, the bank, a visit to a friend. Transportation isn’t just medical — most of the value is in keeping ordinary life moving.
An honest note
When a ride alone isn’t enough.
Some appointments aren’t really transportation jobs — they’re care jobs with transportation attached. A same-day surgery discharge with grogginess and sedation restrictions. A cardiology visit where the doctor is about to change three medications. A memory-care assessment where the family needs a real account of what happened in the room.
For those, a standalone ride service — Uber, Lyft, or a medical transport — isn’t the right call, even though on paper it’s what’s being requested. The client ends up unattended during the appointment, the family gets no information back, and by the next morning no one is sure what the plan is.
The opposite is also true: if what’s actually needed is a ride to the airport or a one-off trip across the Bay Bridge, there are cheaper, better-fit options, and I’ll point you to them.
The best version of this service looks like a trusted family member doing the drive — someone who asks the right questions, notices what’s off, and tells you about it. When that’s what the appointment needs, that’s what we send.
— Eytan Klawer , Founder
How it works
How transportation works with Liora.
- Caregivers comfortable in medical settings.
For medical appointments, I match caregivers who know how to listen in a clinic and write notes a family can use. - Continuity across appointments.
The same caregiver across a client’s regular providers — so context carries from one visit to the next. - Vetted drivers, insured vehicles.
Clean driving records, current insurance, and vehicles appropriate for older adults — not compact cars with low seats. - Pre-appointment briefing.
Before a significant visit, we talk through what questions to ask and what the family wants to know after. - Notes sent the same day.
What was said, what was prescribed, what the follow-up is — in a form a family at a distance can actually use. - I’m available when things go sideways.
Unexpected diagnosis, an appointment that turns into a hospital admission, a medication change that needs coordination — you call me, I help you sort it.
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Let’s talk
Not sure if this is what you need?
You'll reach me directly. I pick up the phone myself.
— Eytan Klawer, Founder