My mom is on her second week in an ALF. She seems very depressed. Should I consider asking the doctor for something to help her? If so, what has worked? She has always been a solitary soul. Not comfortable socially. That personality is detrimental to her now. Any suggestions?
My parent's ALF also had a gorgeous garden which they both enjoyed strolling around; mom would push dad in his wheelchair on a nice day. Are there any trips scheduled at the ALF you can interest mom in going on? Even to the grocery store, just to get out........that's how she'll meet other residents and get talking.
Good luck!
When you think about it, making friends as an adult is really hard if you don't have a common situation with your new friends like kids, or the same workplace or hobby. Being elderly together isn't as easy as it seems, and by watching my mother (granted, in MC, not AL) I found that the residents did things side-by-side rather than "together" -- kind of like toddlers do.
My mother wasn't social either, but her caregivers brought her out to where the action was every single day. She was sad in her new digs, too, but she settled in without much effort after a couple of weeks.
Give her a little time and enlist the assistance of the people who work there before going for drugs.
My mother 86 did the same with a change in caregivers. Now she adores the ones she has.
Structure and schedules are a comfort to the elderly. Give her a few months but make the staff and management aware she seems depressed. They can work on getting her involved and making new friends.
Funny example...My dad loves Bingo, but baulked at continuing to go to the care facility's Bingo because they only paid out in chocolate. A caregiver and I took him to Bingo at the casino (I'd never been). The reaction was like a wakeup call. He was alert, he sat up straighter, he moved his wheelchair, he spoke clearer, he told the caregiver what he wanted or did not want, marked every card perfectly (as long as not too many cards LOL), all sorts of things like that. So the one caregiver takes him to Bingo at the casino every Thursday even though it costs money.
For my mom, we make sure to take books she likes to the rehab. She had just been to the library before her accident so we make sure she has two books. She gives one up and next day (visit) Dad brings her another. I made sure her friend groups knew where she was. She operates her phone just fine and chooses when to answer text or phone messages :-).
TV - find shows they like, post the dates and times where they can see them. Visit when it is time to see what is getting in the way of them watching.
Discussion - what did they have for lunch? who did they sit with? is there a "nurse" or "caregiver" they like? What did they like about the day? If there is something they could change, what would it be? (change this to be appropriate - change about the day, change about the bed or room or dresser or...) No "hot" buttons, just get person to talk. Ever talk to a teenager? no questions they can answer "yes" or "no" to LOL.
IF person likes card games, find out what they know and play. Crazy eight, Old Maid, 5 Crowns, Uno, Solitaire, anything! It will help.
IF person can use an electronic device, is there a game they like? What did they do before? Find a way to duplicate the fun thing.
So, when home, my mother is a "bear" and the caregivers and I talk about not poking the bear. House is much quieter without my mom there. It is three months since my dad came home and he is just now coming out of a depressed like state. He is still in a wheelchair, but doing more transfers on his own, caregivers focused on him.
At Christmas time and for his birthday, my dad was at a facility and lonely and COVID restrictions were not helping. I taped all the cards on the wall where he could see them in bed and roll to them in the wheelchair. People cared.
My mother-in-law's last days were at a home and we put string up and looped cards over so she could see them. Depressed? Sure, but the cards gave her something to look at, remember, ask about, stories of friends came out. Oh! and ask what she remembers about...[pick a good memory you have]. Then pick another. Pick her brain about things you want to know about.
Those are things I've done and tried. THANK YOU! just writing this helped me think of what to do my next trip (I live in OR and my parents in AZ).