This social service is provided for adults with disabilities aged 18 and over who have Disability Groups I–III and require support with daily living, social adaptation, and access to a safe and meaningful daytime environment.
Day care services are designed to ensure that people are not left alone with isolation, daily challenges, or limitations caused by disability. It is a space where every individual can feel accepted, valued, and included in community life regardless of their diagnosis or level of support needs.
Throughout the day, participants stay in a safe, supportive, and welcoming environment where they receive care, guidance, and assistance tailored to their individual needs. For many adults with disabilities, this service becomes much more than simply a place of support — it becomes an important part of life filled with communication, social interaction, new experiences, and a sense of belonging.
Participants receive support with personal care, daily routines, organisation of everyday activities, health monitoring, and maintaining daily functioning. At the same time, significant attention is given to developing practical skills, encouraging independence, and supporting the highest possible level of autonomy in everyday life.
As part of the service, participants engage in developmental, social, creative, household, and recreational activities that support emotional well-being, communication, cognitive engagement, and social skills. These may include creative workshops, music activities, training kitchen sessions, group activities, art therapy, movement-based activities, and other forms of supportive engagement.
A particularly important aspect of the service is the atmosphere of acceptance, dignity, and humanity. For many participants, the Centre becomes a place where they are not defined by their diagnosis or limitations, but recognised first and foremost as people — individuals with personalities, interests, emotions, dreams, and the right to live a dignified and meaningful life.
Day care services also provide essential support for families who often carry significant physical and emotional caregiving responsibilities for many years. Families gain the opportunity to restore some of their own emotional resources, attend to everyday responsibilities, and feel that they are not facing these challenges alone.
Most importantly, this service helps adults with disabilities maintain activity, social connections, practical skills, and a sense of self-worth. It creates opportunities to remain engaged in society, build relationships, express individuality, and live a fuller, more meaningful, and dignified life within their community.
