Who we are
About Us
Shaye Nava In-Home Care was created to bring a more personal, community-rooted touch to in-home support for individuals with disabilities who want to remain safe, comfortable, and connected in the community. We structure care around each client’s routines, preferences, and goals so care fits the person—not the other way around. To keep care safe and trustworthy, our team completes background checks, our aides are trained for assigned duties, and we prioritize clear communication with family and approved support contacts.
About the Owner/ Shaye
I’m proud to be from the community of Wyatt. My husband volunteers with the fire department, and I’m a mother of three. I also work through a home health agency caring for one of my own family members who lives with a disability—so this work is personal. Over time, I realized that independence doesn’t always mean being alone. Many people want to live on their own, but still need safety, structure, and connection—especially when they want to stay close to family and remain part of their community. What began as a dream in 2013 became reality in 2025, created in hopes of bringing back the “good ole days,” where neighbors felt like family.
Training and Education
My path into caregiving has been hands-on, community-based, and built over years of real work with real people. I completed Certified Nursing Assistant training in Arkansas and gained early experience in roles that taught me reliability, safety, and service—working as a food service worker, head custodian, and EVS (Environmental Services) tech. From there, I moved into people-centered support roles as a Behavioral Tech, Personal Care Aide, and Home Health Aide, where I learned how much routine, patience, and respectful consistency can change a person’s whole day.
Alongside that work, I earned an Associate’s degree in Criminal Justice—an education that sharpened my focus on ethics, accountability, and creating safe environments for vulnerable individuals. I continue to build my skills through ongoing training with Relias and Acumen, because caring for people well isn’t something you “finish”—it’s something you keep learning how to do better, year after year.