Mom is 89 now. Dementia has been getting a bit worse over time.
We tried the aide, who could not give meds first, since mom in the past could inject herself with a somewhat simple regimen of insulin and give herself her daily pills.
We tried the nurse coming in, but they never came at the time they were supposed to to check Mom’s levels and administer the meds.
After mom landed in the hospital with a sugar level of 46 last May, she has since gone first to the hospital, then to rehab and then to a nursing home. She is still there now.
It’s a wonderful place with very caring staff.
My dilemma is that mom is still very mobile and walks faster than I do while the other residents there are either bedridden or wheel chair bound.
I work full time and am an only child and I’m unable to quit my job to take mom out of the NH to stay with her.
I feel so confused as to her mental and health state when I visit and she is somewhat coherent and SO mobile!
Does anyone else go through this back and forth of thinking of letting her be in her own home, that she owns, quitting work to be there? We are taking care of the house bills but if we sell it, she will be ineligible for Medicaid so the money will be gone quickly.
Our relationship was never close. Her friends were always first.
I've been helping Mom since Dad died 15 years ago.
Anyone have any words of wisdom?
thank you,
Confused
It appears that your mom needs to be in a skilled nursing facility - since a nurse will need to give her medications and monitor her blood sugar. Find one nearby that will allow private pay (until her funds run out) and will help her to apply and use Medicaid if needed. Since she is mobile, consider places with nice courtyards she can walk around in and activities for those who can move. Talk to the activities director about what "active" events are on their calendar regularly.
Best decision ever! Like a new man, he got a spring back in his step, his walking looked better than it had in years (with a walker). He certainly didn’t look like someone who needed to be in a nursing facility.
It was the structure and stability that he needed. They made sure he ate 3 times a day. His meds were on time, every time. They didn’t let him languish in his chair, he got physical therapy. He even got better meds, since there were lots of eyes on him there.
So the setting is very important. Like your Mother, Papa was the fittest resident there. But they discharged him home and he was back six months later the same weak dehydrated little man. The structure and stability matters a lot.
I do need some more information though... I am correct in thinking that by the term nursing home you mean she is in a long term care (LTC) facility for custodial care? She might find more active colleagues in an AL but if you find one that is a fit for her, see if:
** they have a specialized memory care (MC) unit
** they will guarantee her a Medicaid bed when she runs out of private funds (get that one in writing although be aware that should the facility be sold that agreement blows up in the wind)
** if they have an attached LTC unit if case she should ever need that level of care.
Another question - there anyone living in her home now? If no one is living there, the home is her asset, can be sold and the proceeds used for payment of her new living quarters at the LTC or AL, just like they would be if she had decided to move to a retirement community in FL. Once those proceeds are gone she would be eligible for Medicaid but in NJ you can apply before the house is sold so that you are on their radar even though she will not get funds until she reaches the NJ Medicaid threshold of $2000. Medicaid in NJ also has a load of other benefits including some in home care although not sure if your Mom is beyond that stage and you always have to worry about the caregiver getting to the house in snow storms or just dealing with their own personal family emergencies.
In the facility I worked at we had a very active and mobile patient who was an accountant. We brought him accounting paper and he happily sat at a desk for several hours a day.. "calculating". Under close supervision we also let him "help" the staff wheel wheelchair residents to activities (that was a real help incidentally!). Sometime he would stay and participate and other times he excused himself to get back to "work". It was great having a staff that was really into their residents individual "quirks".
Good Luck!!
Where are her friends now? If she has always made friends easily and enjoyed those relationships again she is probably in the right place, unless her friends visited all the time when she was home (meaning they still could visit at NH) having peers around all the time is probably much better for her than being sheltered at home. The fact that she’s so mobile and fairly coherent means you could probably take her out for lunch or to visit friends, maybe there are younger friends who you would trust to take her out to lunch or something too. This is something you would want to talk over with the staff and her doctors but while some residents need to be “locked in” and not able to go out on their own not all are at the point where it’s better if they don’t go out supervised either, it doesn’t sound like your moms at that point. The other advantage with not taking her home now of course is that she has the ability and time to get comfortable and feel at home where she is before she gets to the point where she can no longer go out and can’t remember why she is where she is.
None of this is easy but I think you are following the best track for you and your mom so focus on the positives here rather than considering huge changes, especially changes made out of misplaced guilt. Guilt is never a good reason to upheave your life. It sounds to me as though you are and have been doing everything you can to provide the best for your mom.
Stay strong
In less secure settings, this combination of abilities creates enormous burdens for caregivers. Lack of safety awareness means that your mom might decide that she wants to go for a walk....during the night.
Dementia always progresses, and her diabetes suggests vascular dementia. This has a less predictable pattern progression.
You've already discovered that relying on care at home is not enough for her, given her situation.
You are doing the best thing for her, visiting her in a great facility that cares for her. Try to let go of whatever guilt may be pushing you to think about taking her out of the place that is now 'home' for her.
So, reading between the lines, your mom is already on Medicaid, her home as an exempt asset is sitting empty and you are trying to keep it up?
Unless you have some reason to believe you will own it one day, you might be better served to sell it now, use her money until it is gone and then put her back on Medicaid. Then you won’t have to spend your money (and time) keeping it up.
Perhaps you could find a bed and board home or an ALF that would be less expensive than the NH and her money would last longer? You could have a needs assessment done now that she is better to see if that is even feasible.
And yes, I think all the time how sharp my DH aunt is at 95 with long term dementia. But she has NO children or anyone else stepping up to take care of her. Even though I have taken care of her a long time, I am no longer able to do so. and she was easy in comparison to many.
I accept that she is where she needs to be.
You have to make peace with that. I really wasn’t able to until aunt had a flood in her home that required her to be moved out while repairs were made. Once the cycle was broken, I was able to see that I was done. She has accepted it totally and like your mom seems much better than before. Of course, she could wake up in a different world tomorrow but I accept that as well.
Even if you have a lady bird deed or a life estate warranty deed, trust, whatever, it is a long haul to keep the home going with taxes, insurance, lawn maintenance yada, yada, yada and Medicaid laws are subject to change.
Give us some feedback and you will get better answers.
It is confusing when they don't seem "that bad" but remember how quickly she could take a turn without the care she's getting now. How long until she faces a diabetic disaster again? It sounds like she's doing great where she is now, I'd take that as evidence she's in the right place. She's already there and doing well I would consider that a way better option than quitting your job and moving into her place.