Two months ago, we moved our 84 yr old sister into a reputable Asisted Living Facility. She is a widow with no children and she is intelligent but has dementia and paranoia, which are progressing. I lived with her for a year to help her after she hurt her back but I couldn’t stay forever. She thinks family is stealing her money, etc. so we were not confidant she could tolerate strangers in her home. After her second fall at home, we moved her into Assisted Living.
My sister is very unhappy at the Assisted Living and only wants to go home. It is a “jail” to her. So hard for her and us. Her mental decline is very obvious.
The AL facility just told us today that they need to move her to Memory Care or we’ll have to hire a 24 hour sitter for her. She is confused and wandering at night. They found her near the front door one night. They said she requires Memory Care for her safety or a 24 hr sitter.
I think she will hate Memory Care even more. The part of her that is still intelligent will know she is locked up and she will be embarrassed to be there. Her bedroom will also be a very small room and many of the residents appear non-communicative.
Hiring a 24 hr sitter at the AL facility wouldn’t work financially.
I’m distraught. Any experience or thoughts appreciated.
I believe that, for your sister, you need to look at the big picture. She has dementia and paranoia, and unfortunately this only gets worse with time. Sadly, she will eventually come to the point that she will not know where she is st. However, if she is in the locked unit, she will be safe. These units have smaller resident populations and more staff to care for them.
Facilities do not suggest that a resident be transferred to a locked unit without good reason. My mom was angry as well when we made the decision to move her, bit like your sister, she was angry from the day she realized she was in a facility. This is difficult on everyone involved. Reassure her there is no reason for her to be embarrassed. The staff is used to dealing with these emotions and they will help her get through it.
Don't feel restricted to that choice. Looking at a website called www.alzheimers.net I can see that there are many specialist dementia care providers in Virginia; and given the range of mental function that your sister retains she may do better - by which I mean be happier and better supported - in a dedicated environment.
The thing is. In a standard facility, even a good one, that offers continuing care, dementia is treated as a regrettable progression. In a specialist facility, living well with dementia is what they're *for*. There can be a completely different approach and different mindset. Your sister, being aware, might be their ideal kind of resident.
I don't want to raise false hopes and I admit I have no idea of what the state-of-the-art is like in Virginia, but I do urge you to keep looking.
In a situation almost exactly the same as yours, a psychiatric evaluation by a well trained geriatric professional revealed symptoms of cognitive loss in our LO that we, as family, had not even considered when she was placed in the facility in which she now resides. A recommendation of a very modest dose of a calming medication proved extremely helpful to her.
Her process to the Memory Care floor was so much like your sister’s that the comparison is almost shocking, and our fears were virtually the same as your fears.
My relative had a significant fall history, was a bright, well loved and respected member of the community, began having significant issues while at home with memory loss, paranoia, wandering, severe confusion......
We actually had suggested that we would responsible for hiring a 24/7 aide to shadow her in an area of the residence that was less restricted, but after thorough consideration of all alternatives, had to agree with her truly compassionate caregivers that a “restricted”, locked floor was the best option to provide for her comfort, and most important, her safety.
As to being “very unhappy” it has been my observation that there were indications through my LO’s long life that she was not a particularly “happy” person. Family members visit her at least every other day, and her demeanor, if considered as objectively as possible, is fairly close to about what it was when she was home.
She has some very sad incidents with me, as I believe she and I share one of the last links to her earlier life. This past Saturday she was VERY angry that I refused to “take her home”, but even in her anger, she acknowledged that she wished me no harm for perpetuating her discomfort. When this happens, I have come to learn that she will have forgotten all about such incidents by the time I next visit her.
So a couple things about your observations about your sister- whether other residents communicate or not, dementia is so difficult to predict that your sister may not care at all that some or all of her fellow residents are non-verbal. My LO views the idiosyncratic behavior she sometimes sees with bemused disinterest.
Try to consider the fact that what you are thinking she will think may not be how she actually responds, especially since you can observe deterioration in her overall mental circumstances. Always bear in mind that at this point, her safety is paramount. Painful falls that were weathered in a previous stage of life may now become devastating.
If you have confidence in the staff who are responsible for her care, consider their input and work with them to support what may not be able to make her happy, but may be able to keep her at the best level of health and welfare possible for her unique circumstances.
Being “distraught” is a fact of life for loving caregivers. I wish with all my heart I could tell you something different from that, but I sometimes feel as though I wish I could give her back the mind she’s losing, and knowing that I can’t causes me Indescribable distress.
If we truly love them, we continue to make the terrible, impossible-to-make decisions, hope those decisions are the best to which we have access, and continue to love them at every moment we are with them.
Sending you positive thoughts and courage.
Well, I'll look it up again! You did suggest looking it up! I'm new here, don't mind me! 💜
The saying that she "wants to go home" is common and often does not mean "home" it means she wants to go to a time when she was well and felt safe.
I think with a Memory Care Unit she will feel more insulated. She will not have a huge building to wander, to get lost in, she will see the same people every day. She will get to know the halls and the people and this will begin to feel comforting and she will get to know the people that are in that unit and the people will get to know her and her "quirks".
What may seem like confinement to you may not to her. As difficult as it is to accept this will continue to decline and she will need the more insulated life in Memory Care, with people that are used to working with "broken brains"
Keep in mind that when you see a small room that is all you see, what she will see and get to know will be "her" space and she will get to know and be able to remember all of it, where the bathroom is, where the light switch is, where her dresser is.....Large spaces get confusing it takes a lot of time to commit things to memory when your memory is not working.
my grandmother got out her bed and was walking in the hallway at midnight. They was able to get her back to her room.
I went through this with my mother - also very intelligent but with early vascular dementia and paranoia. What she wanted was not what was best for her, She was moved from a 2 bedroom apartment to a small room where there was adequate staff and care for her need, and then again a year ago to an NH where there is more care. There is no question in my kind that these moves were needed for her welfare. Initially she didn't like it but she adjusted.
Note -it was not easy for me either nor is it for any of us going through these transitions. I hated packing up my mother's beautiful 2 bedroom apartment knowing that that was the end of that lifestyle for her. But, at the same time, I knew it was necessary. It is just the way it goes for many as they decline. The most fortunate ones, like my grandfather, go to bed at age 82 after a day working outdoors with his son, and never wake up.
I was worried about how she would relate to the other people on the MC unit, but that just hasn't been an issue either. Most everyone there is close to her same functioning level and those that are worse she just mother hens.
It's one of the factors you need to be very disciplined about when you're doing your research. And not just because of the price itself, but because some organisations are more helpfully honest and straightforward than others about what costs a person is *likely* to incur.
It's not all gloom. I've just been looking at a place in Central Florida whose website was a very pleasant surprise. I went to FAQ thinking "I bet they pretend that nobody ever asks about money, the rat-bags..." but no, I had to take it straight back - $$$ was the first subject they dealt with, and in plain English.
But the other thing you need to be just as careful about is whether you're looking at a dementia village, in the vocation's meaning of the term; or a dementia village, in a marketing professional's use of the term. It never takes very long for marketing departments to latch on to exciting key words and there is nothing to stop them abusing them, sadly.
My sister is the oldest of 8 children and we all want only the very best for her. It has been heartbreaking and such a roller coaster ride. I have wondered so often in the past 2 months if I made the right decision, agreeing to move her to AL. I often “feel” that I failed her. It has been even more heartbreaking because our family has been divided into 2 camps. But, unfortunately, the camp that wanted her to “stay home” hasn’t been able to visit her much in the past year or provide much of her care. They can’t accept that the move to AL couldn’t be avoided by finding someone we could trust to live with her.
Each day has been an emotional challenge. Yesterday, I took her on our first “outing” together to see our brother. Went great until I took her back to AL - when she became quite angry. Tonight, she was cheerful and called to say that she had been chit-chatting with one of the AL residents in their room. Oh my- my first thought was, “They can’t move her to MC - she is showing signs of being able to make friends in AL! She just needs more time to adjust.”
But your input helped me return to reality that, based on ALL her behaviors, she needs more care and safety than AL can provide.
Thank you. I am praying that she doesn’t freak out when moved and that she can actually thrive in MC as one of you experienced with your loved one. And that both I and my family members can accept seeing her in the MC environment.