My father needs to go into long term care. I have been looking for a facility that would be just as nice as his assisted-living community. Was I in for a surprise! The majority of facilities I have visited, do not have private rooms. One facility even had 3 people in one room, no bigger than my bedroom at home.They all had one bathroom and one closet to share. So the shocker......the cost. The cost IS DOUBLE the amount he pays for his assisted living. How can that be for a shared room, bathroom, closet, noise, visitors, etc....This has truly been a wake up call. My options for him are slim and none. Any comments or suggestions?
Good luck, stay strong. Reach out to friends for comfort. Best of luck. Keep us posted.
I thought it would be interesting to look at childcare rates, thinking that care for an infant would have some similarities to care for an elderly person. I found that childcare rates are from about $100 to $200 per week (depending upon area, of course). This would mean ca. $5K to $10K per year. From what I can determine, typically there is no nursing staff. However, this is generally for weekday daytime hours and not 24/7, so AL rates of ca. $30K per year don't seem so unreasonable. Nursing homes, because of their additional costs, can be expected to cost much more, but whether $70K or more per year is "reasonable" for a nursing home is difficult to answer without taking into account all the additional regulations and requirements.
I suspect a big part of the issue is that some elderly people require some assistance for daily living but aren't quite competent enough to take their medications--that is, a nursing home may be "overkill" (no pun intended!) for some elderly who need slightly more than AL provides. Is it possible for someone to be admitted into AL with the understanding that a family member or other person will visit make certain the resident takes his/her medication?
I suspect a huge part of the cost has to do with preventing and insuring against medical liability issues in the American "land of lawsuits"!
'respite' and no-projected-future-for-me-lifestyle. I just CANNOT consider delegating my Mom to government-paid stressed-out strangers in a warehouse-style facility ! What if she's thirsty but can't find the word? She's embarrassed to no end if the poops her pants- and it's just us here ! Every time I get frustrated, every time I want to pull out my hair over an old story about my ex-husband that goes on repeatedly EVERY day...(at breakfast !!!) and how much she hates him, and how much she hates her father, and blah, blah, blah...I envision her alone and afraid with (maybe even kind) strangers, with (like you described) several people in a room (when she is afraid of anyone coming into this house...) I put on my big-girl pants, suck it up and move on to another day. ALL 63 million of us here in the US of A need to start emailing our congressmen. (Not just me, thank you.) Generations of folks who have not paid into the system get more 'assistance' than those of us who pay taxes. I will leave this adventure (fourth family member cared for) with the hope that these years have galvanized experiences in me that will somehow benefit my ENTRY BACK INTO THE WORKPLACE IN MY SIXTIES.
As Mallory had mentioned above the cost of running a nursing home, especially employees... sales to liability insurance, property taxes and utility bills. Accountants and lawyers. Security and maintenance [interior and exterior], housekeeping and laundry service, and transportation services.
People are living longer and developing more health problems, some of which are beyond the ability of caregivers to manage at home. Commercial providers see a need, move in, and establish a foothold. Some attorneys have focused on asset management specifically designed to open up Medicaid qualification for people, enlarging the pool of potential facility residents. Elderly folks bring in dollars for commercial enterprises.
But it's not just the elderly who are becoming profit centers. As individuals, we are as well. Think about all the data being collected on us, whether we're caregivers or not. If you read privacy policies and terms of service for websites, you'll find references to data gathering, third party use, etc., etc.
People and our data are the hot commodities now. Marketers want that data, and they get it.
Once all of us early baby boomers are on very long waiting list to get into retirement villages, assisted living facilities, memory care facilities, nursing homes, etc. I hope we will see a fury of new construction of such places.
I know in my area, they can't build 55+ communities fast enough. Those 55+ residents [55 to 90] will need to go to another layer of care within the next 10-20 years. There are many of us who never were blessed with children, so we will need to pay our way for hands on care.
This reminds me of a movement I discovered a little over 10 years ago. At that time it was called the Eden Alternative, or it might have been the Eden Initiative.
I did check out one facility practicing this and was very, very disappointed. Although the principles of integrating pet activity and other helpful practices were in existence, it was county run (by a wealthy county) and was desperately depressing. I couldn't wait to get out of there.
Perhaps the movements have changed; it's worth investigating.
What is the point in taking routine medications that may prolong our lives just so we can live in a care facility or be a burden to our families. It makes no sense. When I can no longer live on my own, it's time for me to go and the sooner the better. I would like to leave this earth knowing that I had a good life and was not a burden on my family or society. Until modern medicine can guarantee me a quality of life to match the quantity of life it can give me palliative care sounds like a very reasonable choice for me.
When flu was identified "on-site" @ the AL, as their R.N. told me, they requested Mom's doctor authorize an antibiotic ("Z-Pack")for her. Two days later, they requested (and received) authorization for Tamiflu. My mother has a history of serious adverse reactions to meds - and the pharmacist warned me to watch her closely for "any neurological disturbances", which should be "immediately reported" to her doctor. Sure enough, 2 days later she was complaining that "there's something wrong with my head!". The Dr. ordered "D/C the Tamiflu". In response, the nursing staff FAX'd the Dr. "Why?" - but the Dr. had left for a 3-day wk-end! Therefore, the Tamiflu was continued!? By the Dr's. return, Mother was absolutely incoherent and disoriented, "out-of-touch"!! Only gibberish came out of her mouth. It was horrible, absolutely gut-wrenching. (For your own information, just look up the side-effects, and LIMITED VALUE of Tamiflu! I looked it up and brought it to the R.N.'s attention. She said she was previously unaware of the data!).
While the AL facility, the Dr., and even the hospital tried to justify other causes for Mother's condition, I kept encouraging her not to give up when she said "I just want to die". I'd seen her reactions and recovery from being over-medicated before, and so kept encouraging her with, "You'll feel better, Mom, when you get these meds out of your system." A retired R.N. friend helped me console and comfort her, as well as feed her so she could regain some strength. As the meds wore off, she DID feel better and became Mom again! Again, she was as spunky and sharp as always - astonishing everyone she encountered - except me. I was just relieved, and ever so grateful she'd made it through once again. Hallelujah!
With the help of 2 attorneys, we got her out of there! I gave up the last of my Substitute Teaching and took her home with me, where I became her 24-hour CareGiver. My only sibling died long ago, and my family is grown and gone, so it was just Mom and me. We had many enlightening, provocative, funny conversations; a 99th birthday party with her church friends; Bible study, church on Sunday; shopping trips; meals out - and memories (and pictures!) to fill my heart. When, after a heart attack, she became bed-ridden - friends came to visit, and Hospice became part of our life. All were amazed @ her interesting, meaningful conversation. I slept in a recliner by her bed to respond to the necessary commode assistance she required or her calls with "I'm thirsty.". I was finally using just an eye-dropper of water to ease her thirst.
Yes, I was short on sleep at times, constantly on call with the bell I gave her to summon me, and pretty much house-bound. But I do not regret any of it. I am grateful that I had her here with me until the day she died. She was again on her own turf, among her "old" friends, and in the care and company of someone who really knew and loved her.
I hope readers will join me in advocating for funding for Caregiver Assistance Programs through Area Agency on Aging. This was a big help to me by providing several hours a week of Caregiving Assistants. Support for In-Home care will be far less costly than the for-profit corporations that Assisted-Living facilities have become. Veterans' funding has now become one of their primary targets for getting Veteran residents. And, yes, they even use their own related pharmacies to boost profits for all the medications they provide residents. These pharmacies charge as much as 10 times the price Costco or Wal-Mart charges for these same meds! These facilities should not be so-connected, since it incentivizes excessive use of meds for their residents!
Please contact your Legislators on these important issues, and INFORM YOUR FRIENDS and FAMILY!
This has been a time-consuming lengthy response, but contains heartfelt messages I hope readers will sincerely think about, consider, share, and hopefully - even act upon!
The whole system is a mess - and I don't know what the solution is. In general, however, nursing homes are much better than they were 50 years ago because they are highly regulated. I've visited several in recent years and they are so "nice" compared to the ones I saw when I was a youth and visiting relatives there. I think sometimes we have unrealistic expectations of what a "nursing home" is supposed to be like. In many ways, a NH is a bit like a long-term care hospital with semi-private rooms and different staff members performing different functions.
In the past, it was not the rosy situation people like to believe. Not everyone was taken in my relatives and cared for. Some were left to die in their own excrement - because they had no living relatives, or none that cared. Some wandered off into the woods and died of exposure or dehydration.
We all criticize the current system.....but I have yet to see any real solutions offered to the problem. Things will only get worse as people continue to outlive their own life expectancy due to advances in medical science. What will we do with all of these very old people?