I am getting very close to finding mom a place to live that is not in my house. Between dementia and incontinence, it is getting very difficult for me. But it just does not seem like any level is really the right fit currently. When she gets a little bit worse, yes, but not today.
IL, no way.
AL, doubtful. She has mild maybe getting close to moderate dementia. She needs medical help, prompts for many/most things, bladder/incontinence issues, etc.
SNF, seems too with it for this?
MC, kind of, but it seems like most in MC are of the more severe dementia type and that would not be a good fit while she is not in that category yet.
It may seem like I'm making excuses, but it just doesn't seem like anything fits.
She is 79 and continues to decline. She has a hard time remembering what to do. Can't retain info that she's told and therefore asks the same questions about what/when/who. She used to read a lot but is now having a hard time following books. Used to play a lot of cards but can't remember the rules and needs nearly constant prompts to play.
I know a facility will be happy to help me figure this out, but I don't know if I'm ready to sit down with someone because I feel the pressure will be on to make it actually happen. I don't want to be pushed into it. Just trying to mentally prepare for the rather inevitable.
and see what he/she advise. Do you have sibling nearby? Or can you organize a phone conference?
This is much too big a decision for you to deal with alone.
You should also consider contacting APS {Adult Protective Services and ask them if they can hook you up with a social worker if her Dr. doesn't suggest it first. But, please GET HER TO A DR. FIRST.
Then, to give yourself extra peace of mind when everything else is under control, make yourself an appointment with a therapist just for someone neutral to talk to. This forum is great but sometimes people need face to face assurance. It doesn't mean you're crazy, it's just to give you a personal sounding board, sort to speak.
Good luck and God bless.
So sorry you are at this difficult stage but know that there are a lot of us who have been or are currently in this boat with you.
I also recommend consulting an Elder Care Mgr (name may differ on your state). I spoke with two; they had had a comprehensive understanding of services in my locale (Central MA). One I paid and the other one facilitated an Alzheimer’s support group I attended.
My husband is insulin-dependent diabetic, has dementia, and needs help with most ADLs. Until I talked with them, I was unaware that AL places in MA do not administer insulin; that knowledge saved me a lot of time. They were able to identify the best place for my husband (a hybrid between NH & AL).
Making the decision to move your mother will never be easy; it will take a combination of love for your mother and self-love. I wish you well.
has dementia and other health issues. When she broke her wrist a few months ago she spent 30day in a care facility it was the worst care and a horrible place I will never put her through that again. The dementia was diagnosed just 3 weeks ago but explains a lot. She is declining very fast. I will continue to care for her as long as she knows who I am and where she is. Obviously some days better than others. Her doctor refuses to authorize care and insists in that terrible facility. Looking for a new doc now. When it comes down to it all that is needed is companionship food diaper and bed changes. For the cost of these jails I can do a better job. Since she is my wife I am on the hook for all expenses until I am broke. So many things to consider.
since his funeral almost five years ago, so I understand.
Prayers
The Dr hooked us up with a social worker who gave us the name of an advisor. This person knows the places and took us around to a few we picked out. She really helped us. I had had difficulty getting tours set up due to covid. But she got us in every where. When she finally met mom she said she would need higher level of care in AL and maybe MC. In hindsight she was right.
Things can go quickly. 6 mo in she moved to a different wing for more acute AL. 2mo after, to the next building for the highest functioning MC (1 of 4 levels).
Then we moved her to AL in new facility that takes Medicaid and does aging in place. The advisor helped us find that place too. Mom is in their highest level of care unit. She went from highest functioning to lowest. We were a bit worried at that move but within a month she is now in a geri chair with hospice visits every day. I wish we had known about this place from the start but we did what we could with what we knew.
Your mom seems to need MC. If you can get help like we did it would make things clearer. Someone to shoot questions to who knows all the facilities and knows elder care well.
She sounds like a AL/MC person. My mom has memory loss, and physical issues, and does really well at AL. Each place is going to be different, but many ALs are a cross between AL/MC. If they have a MC wing, sometimes you can start in AL and if it progresses where she needs more help or wanders, then MC.
If facilities offer multiple levels of care, you can usually start at the lowest and move up when needed. The nurse at the facility will assess them and tell you.
I'd start now and take her with and see which one she gravitates to.
As with any decision, there will be a lot to learn about your options. The more facilities you visit, you will realize you have more questions than you thought. Most will invite you to a meal, or even some of the activities. This is a great way to observe them in a more natural setting. If nothing else, you will find some to eliminate. You never know when an emergency placement might be necessary and it will be that much easier if you have at least ruled out some of the choices.
One key question is (for you and a geriatrician, good to establishing a relationship with one over one's general primary care MD), is she "safe" and which ADLs or IADLs can she do fully independently not and what is likely 6 months from now or next year? The more she cannot do safely, independently and consistently (toilet, transfer, manger her on Rx schedule, shower, dress, clean, cook, walk, make sound medical or financial decisions) and what medical conditions does she have, more serious then more need for RNs and MDs on site; the more Nursing Home and perhaps MC is needed.
My 85 year old mom has dementia, but often sounds and is quite lucid. She easily gets confused, confabulates (makes up, fills in gaps in memory often with totally made up stuff), has a host of behavioral issues and many medical conditions; and basically is bed bound (she can w/lots of effort walk about 10 feet with a walker)... but it is totally unsafe for her to shower on her own or do much of anything on her own. So a nursing home, with a MC "wing" when/if needed, had to be my choice and one that Medicaid covers as at $15,000.00 per month she blew through what little money she had the first 6 months. But private pay got her into a quality facility and there was no need to move her to another place later, thankfully.
Good luck with this. This is so hard.
Whoever is on the front lines, basically yourself who has seen any changes firsthand and provides that information to your Mom's primary care doctor. If there is a Geriatrician in the neighborhood or a Neuro-psych doc that's even better. Some of the psychiatrist for the elderly can be nuttier than the people with problems. Make sure you run all of your mother's doctors. You can check them out with your State Medical Society online.
I was/am in the same boat.
You could start with a one day a week morning respite "medical model". A lot of the newer facilities especially in the South are setting up different tiers of care.
I'm not sure what region you are from but some have the following: short-term rehab care, long-term care, VNA, day respite care, nursing home, assisted living, palliative care and hospice. Basically, once you arrive here, it's their final resting place.
Presently, Mom is at home with me in a 1st floor modified apartment with all the bells and whistles--hospital bed, railings in the shower, shower chair, lifeline button, censor on the door with camera if Mom sneaks out, etc. We cannot afford an Assisted Living (AL) which in my opinion is real estate. You pay for a room/studio apartment and everything is a la carte--laundry, prescriptions filled/dispensed, CNA dresses Mom, walks Mom to meals, gets her ready for bed.
All cost $$$. If Mom falls and breaks a hip, there's the door, the AL cannot provide that level of care.
This is today, anything could change with the drop of a hat--I found a one morning a week (4) hours per week "day" respite center. One morning a week is all my mother has the energy for. I drive her to and from, although they do provide transportation. She receives physical therapy and speech therapy, continental breakfast and a hot lunch. There is an RN on staff at all times. The ratio is 5:1 meaning for every (5) patients there is someone supervising. They paint, plant, etc. Some people are totally out of it, others are more responsive.
There is a fee plus a co-pay for therapy. Also some have sliding scale and/or grant money.
In all honesty, if my mother attended more frequently I think she would backslide as she is not in the same category (at least not now) with others who are so far advanced with the Dementia.
My mother has Lewy Body Dementia which fluctuates by the minute, hour and day. One days she's good, the next a different color.
It gives me (4) hours without worrying so I won't come home and find Mom on the floor. I, too, am thinking what is the next step? Take notes, or whoever is in the trenches should fill you in on anything.
Also the Veteran's Aid & Attendance is something worth checking out if your mother and/or father were Veteran's.
If you could have a plan in place beforehand so if something happens at 2AM as seems to be in my case you are not stuck scrambling. These things are hard to face and a lot of the "places for Mom" you can check out online--virtual tour. Start a folder, notebook and collect portfolio brochures. Check these place out at night too. Do a walk-through.
They took a poll of people who were on the Board of Nursing Homes (NH) and Assisted Livings' (AL) and asked "Would you like to live here"? No one raised their hand. Everyone wants to remain in their home--myself included.
But, it can't always be done if your mother's care outweighs what one person can provide. Look around now, ask around. Call your Church, a Social Worker, an Elder Attorney for a free one-hour consultation and especially speak with the Nurse Practitioner at your mother's Primary Care docs since they are more thorough and spend more time with you than the docs.
Perhaps you could bring in the VNA for homecare. Have the PCP write orders and start with that.
These things are difficult but I hope I gave you some hope. I will pray for you and your mother. Happy 4th of July--have some strawberry shortcake with
whipped cream!
The other thing that will determine facility is how she will pay. If she's self pay, then you just find a facility to tell you what level of care she needs and pay for it. If she's going to need Medicaid to pay for her bed, you're only option may be Nursing home. Some states do have some assisted living type arrangements with Medicaid, while others do not. Another reason to talk to a couple of facilities.
I kept visiting and asking a lot of questions and visiting and touring with and without my Mom. She ended up going to respite at one of them and that was an eye opening experience which helped me further understand and narrow the choices.
Let the facilities ask you the question about level of care. It helps them determine the cost. Facilities vary a lot in what they provide, what they are licensed for, and what happens as the dementia gets worse. When you are interviewing these facilities, remember they are also seeing if they want you. Remember you will be talking to sales people so you will be getting the “rosy” picture with the potential for lies and false promises.
Don’t think in terms of level of care as this is a subjective measure facilities use for billing. Think in terms of what does the facility provide, what happens in an emergency, what other residents are there and what would happen in the future.
If a facility is too impatient with your questions, mark them off the list no matter how highly rated they are. You need a facility that will work with you, not one that forces you into their mode of operation.
option?
Perhaps you should trust the people who are clinically trained, it is obvious that there is a significate problem, one that you need to come to terms with and accept.
You seem to be wanting to come up with reasons for not accepting the obvious.
This is not about you, it is about what is best for her, long term.
I understand my brother was like you are, coming up with as many excuses as he could, well, she was in MC for 1 month and said "Thank God you had the common sense I did not". Translated, she is where she needs to be.
Good Luck, make the right decision for her.
There is a bit of a movement now with some facilities, and this will get better with time I think, to have an intermediate level of care between that needed for memory care and ALF. It has a bit better staffing and is locked facility, but is otherwise more like ALF.
Just try not to guess, watch and the decision will be made when the time is right. I surely do wish you the best.
And feel free to visit facilities. Let them know that the time isn't now but you recognize it is coming. Let them know you don't want calls, but you would appreciate a sit down talk with folks. If pressure is felt recognize and tell them, and tell them not to do it.
Tour several communities and see what the MC is like. Some have several MC "sections" or "houses" that while in the same building have different décor and feel about them so they seem like contained units. The staff tries to keep the residents that are more active involved and those that do not wish to participate in activities can find a quite place to be.
Is there an Adult Day program she can go to a few days a week? This would get her involved and meeting new people. This might also "bridge" the time between now and when you are ready to have her move into the MC that you choose.
The move to MC will be much more difficult for you than it will be for her.
My mother's MC had three levels of care -- very independent, mid-ground abilities, and low abilities. She started out with the mid-range residents which made up the majority of the people there. They could feed themselves, participated in activities, and could come and go to their rooms or some needed a higher level of physical care like my mom who was wheelchair-bound and incontinent. They were all in the same enormous common room, but one group was at one side of it, and the other was on the other side. The independent folks had their own private room with a TV and coffee and such, but they were free to come and go throughout the facility.
Mom never really participated in the activities all that much -- more due to her vision and hearing issues than her level of cognition -- but the caregivers kept her in the common room all day with everyone else, because just being around the activities and other people was stimulating for her. In the last months of her life she was with the lower-level folks because she was sleeping a lot more and really wasn't eating on her own any longer.
Don't look at memory cares just from the outside. Really tour the places, ask if they have different levels of activities, and see if they just keep everyone together or not. I looked at a couple of other places for Mom where everyone was bunched in together -- including a mentally disabled younger woman at one place(!) -- and they were clearly catering to the lowest common denominator in that they parked everyone in front of a TV. My mother's place only turned on the TV for a half hour after dinner each night, and otherwise they had a different activity every half-hour or 45 minutes to keep things lively. It was an excellent setting, and they were able to care for her all the way until she died.
As long as there's any dementia beyond the very earliest stages, I always recommend memory care because they know how to handle dementia patients and it's so very much more than merely doling out pills and helping people with dressing and showering like assisted living, plus people with dementia don't make friends in AL as easily, if at all. Skilled nursing is for patients who are largely bedbound or wheelchair-bound and can't really do anything, including activities. My mother started in SN (a long story), and it darned near killed her because she was neglected. She wasn't sick and incapable of doing anything, so they didn't really pay attention to her. She had dementia and heart problems, but everyone else in there had had strokes or was rehabbing from surgeries.
I really recommend contacting APlaceforMom.com. They were invaluable in helping me find the best match for my mother with her memory care place. You'll get bombarded with phone calls from various places at first, but it gives you a list of places to check out. Once you tell them to stop calling, they have to stop, and they do.
You're right - this is NOT easy.