Maryland’s senior care regulations — administered by the Maryland Office of Health Care Quality — affect what Dunkirk home care agencies can legally do, how they train and supervise caregivers, and how families can file complaints. Most Dunkirk families don’t know the specific rules until they need them. The summary below covers what matters most for evaluating providers and protecting your parent.
Agency licensing requirements in Maryland
Maryland home care agencies must:
- Hold current state license issued by the Maryland Office of Health Care Quality
- Carry general liability, professional liability, and workers’ compensation insurance
- Run background checks meeting state minimums
- Provide caregiver training meeting state standards
- Maintain supervision standards (typically monthly or quarterly home visits)
- Have documented complaint resolution processes
- Submit to periodic state inspections
Caregiver training requirements
Maryland’s specific training requirements typically include:
- Personal Care Aide (PCA): hours of basic care training
- Certified Home Health Aide (CHHA): 75–120 hours of state-mandated training + competency exam
- Certified Nursing Assistant (CNA): similar to CHHA, more common in facility settings
- Continuing education requirements
- Dementia-specific training for caregivers serving memory care clients
Supervision standards
Maryland’s regulations typically require:
- Initial in-home assessment by a supervisor (often an RN)
- Periodic supervisor visits (monthly to quarterly)
- Documented care plan reviews
- Quality monitoring of caregivers
- 24-hour on-call coverage for clients
How Dunkirk families file complaints
Three paths for Dunkirk families:
- the Maryland Office of Health Care Quality — for regulatory violations and licensing concerns
- Maryland’s Adult Protective Services — for elder abuse, neglect, financial exploitation
- the Calvert County Office on Aging’s ombudsman — for assisted living and nursing facility complaints
Document specifics (dates, names, incidents). All three intake processes are free.
Recent Maryland regulatory changes
Maryland’s senior care regulations evolve. Recent national trends affecting Maryland typically include:
- Background-check refresh frequency requirements
- Caregiver training expansion for dementia
- Wage transparency for home care workers
- Consumer-directed care expansion under Medicaid
- Telehealth coverage in long-term care
Check the Maryland Office of Health Care Quality’s recent rule changes when evaluating Dunkirk-area agencies.
A 15-minute call with a senior care advisor can clarify which Maryland regulations matter for your specific Dunkirk situation. Talk to a TrustedSeniorCareNearMe advisor when you’re ready.


