Follow
Share

Is it mostly for financial reasons? Should we all work together to make sure elderly get good care in these facilities? I have told my children that should I become abusive to them or uncooperative in their efforts to help me as I age, they are to have me move to a facility because at present, in my right mind, I am convinced they deserve better than that. Would your parents want you to to suffer so much for them. I read a lot of suffering on this site.

This question has been closed for answers. Ask a New Question.
Find Care & Housing
No, that's probably a less common reason for doing home care, though there certainly are people who financially don't have options and for any number of reasons do nto qualify for help. What I have learned since being on here is that many people simply believe that facilities are for people whose families do not love them, or that all facilities are bad, or that only bad people put their loved ones in facilities. I wish it were not so, but that's where it is for a lot of people; they don't think of someone's need outstripping their abilities, or tolerance. Sadly, some people even keep loved ones at home even if it means they can't even get them out of bed, let alone take any kind of trip outside the home, and that means a lot lower quality of life. We had a family with multiple members with a musclar dystrophy condition who just did that and let nature take its course, so that when the affected members were too weak to get up on their own, they just became invalids and bed bound for the rest of their lives. It was just what they did. Don't get me wrong - home is often best for any number of reasons, and I wish we had never needed facilties for my parents! But, wishing did not make it so....
Helpful Answer (7)
Report

If others are like me, they just take it a day at a time. I am not opposed to helping my mother go to a facility when it is time. We each have to judge when that time is. My mother is not ready to go yet. She can still function in the world. She goes for walks and sits out in the swing. These are times when she is most happy. I have a feeling that in a facility she would end up staying in her room all day watching TV because she is not a socializer. So... not opposed, but the time is not right yet. Maybe something catastrophic, e.g. heart attack, stroke..., will happen before she needs to. We can never tell.
Helpful Answer (6)
Report

You are right. Many people are totally closed to the idea of care centers of any kind. Others, like JessieBelle and me and many others, are open to the idea but continue to care for loved ones at home because it seems to be the best option in our circumstances.

But those who not only insist on keeping their own loved ones at home but also give sometimes heated advice that no one should "dump" their loved ones in a facility or "throw them away"? I can't speak for their reasons but by reading their posts I sense these things:
1) Religious beliefs
2) Guilt
3) A sincere and honest belief that home care is always best
4) An attitude of "If I can do it so can anyone."
5) A belief (perhaps based on limited or outdated experience) that all facilities are terrible places
6) Observation of a situation where a person was indeed "dumped" in a facility and abandoned.
7) A need to justify their own decisions

Such people are entitled to their opinions and to express them here. Whatever their reasons, I think they are wrong. I'm entitled to express that opinion, too.
Helpful Answer (9)
Report

When I began care for my Mother in 2008, she went into a care home near me for a year and a half. My siblings chose not to assist. After a while, I thought I could do better for Mother, which was similar to resort life for her--including spa, beauty treatments, exercise, outings, the best food 3x a day... I know, you want to move to my house, huh ? You are correct.
However, the main caregiver started getting wasted. I started Googling and found this wonderful place:) I negotiated with myself, with my husband, with God.
Finally, after 2 false starts in the wrong homes, I re-placed my Mother in care home of original owner. I tried. I gained weight. I cried. I tripped and fell from lack of sleep. My husband was 100% supportive of whatever I chose to do.
I knew they would not keep up her exercise, and her muscles atrophied. I knew she would not be entertained every waking moment. She was difficult, needy, blind, selfish, not interested in anything but her immediate needs.
Our problem was not money, but giving the most compassionate care to a difficult elder. I tried my best for her. I had to think of my own life and the example I was setting for my own kids. I have told them both and their partners: Never become a martyr to care for me when I need help. God willing, I will die in my sleep after a busy day of singing and gardening. I pray that. We just all do our best and try to figure it out. I processed a lot of crap from my family or origin by taking on my Mother--and my sister. Yay. Moving on. Mother is almost 96, minimal quality of physical life , who knows what is going on in her head. Devastating. Still trying my best. Waiting. Praying. Good question, food for thought. I advocate placement when possible, because each of us is EQUAL. No more sacrificial lambs. xo
Helpful Answer (9)
Report

im on board with allowing my mother to go to a facility when it becomes the option for her best quality of life. i do not imagine a facility having adequate staffing for anyone to give mom the emotional support and personal attention that i can give her at home right now. theyre not going to take her for a sandwich and a little country ride like i now do daily. im not knocking the facilities but for now i think im better emotional support although i am a little deficient in the f*****g spiritual needs department..
Helpful Answer (9)
Report

Believe me if you don't have to don't take your parent to a nursing home. They will not get the attention they need if they are not able to help themselves. My mother just passed away after 2 weeks of pure hell. She was at the nursing home, sent to the hospital, severly dehydraded ??? and went down hill from there. She did not get the attention she needed at this home. Much more to this story, will not go into. If you do have to send your parent to a nursing home make sure it is close enough for you to go over every day, if you want them to possibly get the attention they need. Good Luck, and God Bless
Helpful Answer (3)
Report

There are so many circumstances that have to be considered that I find it difficult to understand if someone is vehemently anti-facility or vehemently pro-homecare. It's a personal decision that, hopefully, is made among families taking everything into consideration especially the day to day care needed for an elderly parent and the ability of one person (usually only one person) to provide that care day in and day out, year after year.

Neither option is ideal (home care vs skilled nursing care) and each has it's own drawbacks and consequences. It's a family decision based upon many factors. But there are zealots out there who will scream their position from the rooftops and expect everyone else to believe the same way. And when someone has an opposing viewpoint they are attacked and ridiculed. In my opinion that says more about that person than it does about the person they're attacking.

I didn't join this website to insult or ridicule anyone, far be it for me to judge others. If I have a personal opinion about a touchy subject such as this I will usually choose to keep it to myself so as not to alienate anyone or insult anyone or their choices. But there are trolls on any website such as this and they sit in their dark little corners in their homes and dish out the poison they are too impotent to handle in their real life. So they attack strangers online and they get to feel smart and important. I think they're silly and their posts say more about them then they do about whatever they're writing about.
Helpful Answer (10)
Report

I know with my parents, it is financial. The medicare facilities are HORRIBLE and we cannot afford other facilities. My mom is unable to speak or move much but is 100% in her mind. Trust me, this is worse than dementia because she is trapped in her own body. She has very high standards and is aware of everything that her caregivers are not doing to her satisfaction. I am exhausted seeing to her and my fathers needs. I am a single mother of two kids, with 2 jobs, dealing with a mentally ill son. My two brothers that live locally refuse to help very much. Both of my parents need to be in a facility but I just don't know how we can afford it.
Helpful Answer (4)
Report

My reasoning is purely fear of the level of care and loneliness she would feel their....I have had bad experiences already in our brief stints in Rehab....There is a small financial motivation as they did not plan for this/and I have gone thru my life savings, it could very well render me homeless after 8+ ys...BUT moms care is priority, whatever happens to me is 2nd .
I had planned to take care of her at home for as long as there was a lite in her eye "so to speak". Once she loses the ability to participate in Life is the time for us. She can still feed herself n answer when spoken to. Also these facilities are 25 miles away. If it was in my town where I could get there in a few minutes would be much more desirable. I
But basically after her injury and visit to one of these facilities, It would have to be just around the corner so I could check/visit on her everyday. Because I plain old don't trust them to care for her needs properly especially when if she cannot speak for herself...just like someone sed above they do not have the time to do the one on one care and interaction I believe my mother requires and deserves for $6-9k per month.....no matter who the heck pays the bill, us or the state. I don't wanna bash all facilities but 2 different times n cities both horrible... k.....
Helpful Answer (2)
Report

Some people are closed to it because the loved one in question is closed to it. Some feel guilty, like they're dumping their loved one in a facility, or they're afraid the loved one will feel abandoned. My MIL, who will probably have to go into LTC soon, does not want to go. She wants to be at home. She firmly believes that people get put in a NH because their families don't want to fool with them. She's in a hospital right now and told my dh she'd rather somebody just took her out and shot her instead of going into a NH. If she was going to die, she wanted to die at home.

I've seen cases where the family just doesn't want to take care of their loved one. Some feel like they're abandoning their loved one if they put them in a facility so they take on the responsibility themselves. Personally, I'm against it unless it is absolutely, positively necessary. In the case of my MIL, I want to be sure we've done everything we can for her before we put her in a home, so I've kinda been fighting it somewhat. But it's gotten to the point where she needs to go. She needs someone to not only watch her, but monitor her blood, vital signs, etc. She's not bathing as often as she should, probably not drinking like she should and I'm already monitoring her medication. My nephew puts the medicine in day and night pillboxes, like a week or two worth, and I give it to her twice a day. She lives by me, so I'm able to do that for her. I also bring her dinner. He buys her food that she can cook in the microwave or she can make herself a sandwich. None of us are qualified to do much more than what we're doing already.
Helpful Answer (1)
Report

My experience has been good, even in the nursing home. Family members do visit every day. But, my Mother was going to waste away, trying to live alone. She is not someone that any of us could live with.

But, she had all of her finances in order. She has Medicare, gap insurance and long term health care insurance. It is important for all of us to plan ahead.

Also, Mother has her own mind and is able to feed herself. Maybe that makes a difference, because she would raise a fuss, if the care wasn't good.
Helpful Answer (4)
Report

Your question is a really good, fair and honest question.

All I can do is tell you what it means to me in my situation.

First I'd like to say that no one should ever feel guilty for putting a loved one in a nursing home. Often there is no other option. I do think that families who put a loved on in a nursing home need to remain vigilant about the care their family member receives.

My parents put my paternal grandmother in a nursing home after she started running away from her assisted living home. For years they invited her to come and live with them, but she always refused. At one point she and my mother had an argument and my grandmother really laid into my mom. It was from that argument that I found out how nasty my grandmother had been to my mom, my dad and even me (unbeknownst to me at the time) for decades. A lot of hatred spilled forth from my grandmother's mouth that day. I never knew she felt that way. In a way it was good she and my mother had that argument because it alleviated any guilt my parents felt about putting her in a locked facility.

That experience has guided my determination to care for my parents in their home. Without going into a long, winding story my special problems in life, my parents went above and beyond the call of duty with regard to always being there for me, supporting me emotionally and sometimes financially. They bailed me out of ridiculous situations time and time again and made it possible for me to be a good parent to my son. Without them in his early years, I'm almost certain I would have lost custody of him.

After I graduated from college I was hopeful that some day I would earn enough money to treat them to trips, vacations, etc., but I never got a job that paid enough for me to spoil them like I wanted to. So caring for them now is my way of giving back to them. It's that simple.

On a grander level, there's a lot of debate in our nation and internationally about how different cultures treat their elderly. I think everyone can agree that, in the US, we place much more value on youthfulness that we do on the wisdom and grace of growing old. This too motivates me to care for my parents and keep them in their home where they are most comfortable.

It's depressing and stressful to care for elderly, sick parents. I cry several times a day just to get the stress out of me. But it's also rewarding to know I'm doing a good thing. And fortunately I have a good relationship with my parents and neither of them has dementia. They are loving and appreciative and tell me so all the time. So I get a lot of warm fuzzies for what I do. But it's still hard for me to watch my father (my mother is quite healthy at 84 and it's safe to say she has more stamina than me) decline and have so many health problems. He's trapped in a body that failed him a long time ago.

The process of watching a loved one die is sad but it's also gracious.

If I could point to one thing that causes me the most stress about the current situation, it's the lack of assistance provided to my parents by a brother and niece who live not five minutes from them (I live two hours away). That single issue is causing me more grief than I ever imagined it could.

Otherwise, I find caring for my parents rewarding. So that's why I don't want them in a nursing home. In my situation it's not necessary.

As for myself, when I'm old...I don't want to be put in a nursing home. I prefer that my life end on my terms and that includes checking out on my own when the time comes. My family has been made aware of this and although they may not believe me now, they will when the time draws near. I don't want them to suffer.

We all suffer at times for the various people we love. Why not suffer for our parents if appropriate and doable?
Helpful Answer (3)
Report

It is a difficult and personal decision. Yes, there are many who think that placing a loved one is throwing them away and they make that judgement call without knowing who you are as a person. Others believe that "we take care of our own" at all costs even if it means going broke, filing bankruptcy and others it is the financial end as to why they don't place a loved one. Putting your life on hold and becoming a full time caregiver 24/7 takes a toll on ones physical and emotional health. Placing a loved one does not make the responsibilities go away. You still have to advocate for them, and if they are in assisted living, you are probably still helping with grocery shopping, dr. appts., laundry,etc. depending on the level of care your loved one needs. My mother has Alzheimer's Disease, she is mentally incapacitated can no longer make decisions for herself that are in her best interest to keep herself safe, fed properly. She is living in assisted living. I do her laundry, take her to appts., advocate for her care, I am still running back and forth between my life with my husband, work, home and seeing my mother. I actually spend more time with my mom than I do my husband. My mother participates in the memory care program daily, when I visit, I take her out of memory care...we have lunch in the dining hall on the assisted living side. Then we take her dog for a walk, and just hang out in her apartment with her dog. I can now spend hours with her, but when she was living at her home, I was running back forth several times a day and not really spending time with her. So far this is working for us and I know my mom is safe and she is being treated with respect.
Helpful Answer (4)
Report

I was of the opinion that just because an elderly person is in a care facility, the family can be as involved as they want. I know folks who spend hours a day with their loved ones, bring them food or special treats,have meals with them engage in activities with them, take them home on visits, etc. but they get to go home and sleep at night. Or if they can't make it someday are not worried their loved on won't be able to eat or be toileted, because they are at home alone all day. But where I live there are many places to choose from with a 20 minute radius, not everyone has those kind of choices.
Helpful Answer (4)
Report

I know why I'm resistant. Being put into a living facility scares me. My grandmother went to one, and we believe she was abused. Also, I want my Mom to be happy and feel safe/secure, which means being at home for as long as possible. Also, though I know I am overwhelmed as her caregiver, I don't want to just dump her somewhere that may not take care of her.
Helpful Answer (1)
Report

Also I have to say just so people are aware....My dr;s nurse told me her mother was raped in a facility up here and the only reason it was found out a newbie aide walked in on it and ran screaming and reported it to authorities or ?? never would have been found out....and Aide was subsequently fired of course..That one is hearsay but why would she make it up??? Just trying to make it real for y'all!
Helpful Answer (0)
Report

despite our efforts to keep elders in their homes as long as possible i read the statistic recently claiming that nearly 70 % of dementia patients pass away in facilities. our hospice nurse explained the other day that this is often the result of a stroke . i could envision the time when round the clock bedside nursing could get to be too much for family. at the same time i know that sometimes NH's are staffed with mental midgets. itll be a hard call when the time comes.
now i can tell a funny one on myself. 6 years ago when i started staying with mom i asked her what i should do if i found her in a low blood sugar coma. i told her i might inject her with pancake syrup. she laughed and told me the syrup in the house was sugar free so that wouldnt help much. my mom is pretty brilliant before the dementia worsened.
Helpful Answer (5)
Report

I just want to add before I forget when we were in the NH/Rehab having horrible issues in February. I consulted the orthopedist for advice and he sed by all means bring her home early if need be, they do so much better at home. That will resonate with me for a long time!!!
Helpful Answer (1)
Report

The reason dementia patients die if they are in a facility is the illness progresses so bodily functions cease. So, one's death certificate will not say cause of death dementia, it will most likely be congestive heart failure or respiratory failure, kidney failure, etc. Having said that, loved ones fear mom or dad dying without anyone around, and its their own fear of death that drives the resistance to place family into a facility. Discussions between parents and adult children need to begin BEFORE dementia robs the person of their wishes, and of course most people will say they do not want to go into a facility. But, the reality is, the adult child(ren) have to balance their lives around what they can reasonable do and what works best for them. Making sacrifices for an elderly parent requires strength and fortitude, but do not be ashamed if you cannot take care of a person with dementia. They won't know about the quality of care and do not forget this is a TERMINAL illness, for which one does not recover.
Helpful Answer (5)
Report

Well contrary to what I read here, I can’t afford to put my wife in a care facility. Back in Dec. she broke her hip, Spend 8 days in the hospital and the next 21 days in a care facility for physical therapy. It was only 10 minutes from our house so I was there every day. I first thing I notice that she was always over medicated, especially when it came to meals, she would sit there in her wheel chair head looking down with not movement or interest to eat. Everyday I tried to get her up and around with her walker to walk up and down to hallway. There was no consistency with the facilities Physical therapist either. In 3 weeks I had met 5 different ones trying to evaluate and work with her. At the end of 3 weeks she was discharged for not being a participant in her own therapy (always over medicated) and Medicare will stop covering this. That’s what they do if you have Dementia/Alzheimer at most Care facilities, wheel chair bound and over medicated. I care for my wife 24/7, I'm a Disabled Veteran and love my wife.
Helpful Answer (1)
Report

I have to agree with jujubean. My mother was in a skilled nursing facility (snf) last fall when she fractured both bones in her lower leg. She has congestive heart failure and severe aortic stenosis and atrial fibrilation. She is 91 yrs old as of January 2013. What I learned is that they make physical therapy a priority because if the physical therapists don't work with the patient they don't get paid and if the patient can't do regular physical therapy then they may not qualify for medicare to pay for the nursing home and they would be given notice to leave. Anyway I could go on about that but I won't. Anyway I tried to tell them they were not allowing my mother to rest her leg. It was still very swollen and bruised and she needed time to lay down and elevate the leg. The routine was to get her out of bed and dressed and sitting in a wheel chair to have breakfast. Then they would leave her in the chair and not let her get back into bed to lie down. Then the physical therapists would come around and take her to physical therapy. The therapy was twice a day. After sixteen days of this my mother was sent into the hospital for exacerbation of her CHF. She was in the hospital for six days and then she went to a different SNF that said they specialized in heart patient care and had oxygen available. The same thing happened there with the physical therapy until I told them her story from the previous SNF. After that most of the physical therapists understood that my mother would comply with whatever they asked but if they didn't pace her and let her rest she would have a flare up of her CHF. The SNF was an hours drive from my home, but I went there every day and made sure she was getting the care she needed. I wasn't totally trusting of the care sometimes, but I had to get some rest so I had to trust that she would be ok at night. It is not easy at times taking care of her, but I want you to know that seven months ago a doctor at the hospital said she only had six months to live and this is eight months later and she is stable but does need someone to care for her to make sure she doesn't fall, etc. Home health care nurse has been seeing her once a week and she has regular doctor appts once a month now. It is not an easy job and if it wasn't for the fact I am retired and a widow I'm not sure I could do the at home care. My mother would not speak up for herself and trusted that the people taking care of her knew what they were doing. I think they know how to toilet people, take blood pressures, temp. and oxygen levels but beyond that it takes a special person to be a caregiver. My observation was some of them had the gift and others were there for the job. I hope this was helpful.
Helpful Answer (1)
Report

I HAVE TO SHARE I JUST LEARNED YESTERDAY THAT THERE WAS A RULING ON THE MEDICARE PLATEAU IN FEB...SOMEONE ON ANOTHER THREAD SHARED WITH ME. IF YOU GOOGLE IT, YOU CAN FIND THE DETAILS BUT I WAS TOLD IT WOULD PREVENT THEM DISCHARGING THE DIMENTIA PATIENTS FOR LACK OF PROGRESS!!! N CAPS CUZ IF THIS IS TRUE IT IS GREAT, IT HAD DISGUSTED ME TO THE POINT OF ALMOST VOMITING WHEN I LEARNED THAT HER QUALITY OF LIFE HAD NO PART IN THE EQUATION!!! I HOPE THIS WILL AT LEAST BE THE START IF NOT THE END ALL OF THAT PRACTICE!!!
Helpful Answer (1)
Report

BUT THERE IS STILL THE ISSUE OF OVERWORKED/UNDERSTAFFED FACILITIES...AND THAT QUALITY OF CARE ISSUE!!!
Helpful Answer (2)
Report

I am taking care of my beautiful Mother,she has osteoporosis,and stone.

this reading is very helpful and interesting my concern is unite estate and we live in Canada.

would you please helping me with advice.I will be very grateful.thanks very much.

,my mama is 89
Helpful Answer (0)
Report

Five years ago, when it first became obvious my aunt was deteriorating, we first placed her in a hospital, then in a nursing home while the family hashed out what was appropriate care.

This first nursing home, unfortunately, was a hell-hole of a place. I never saw any sign that anyone paid any attention at all to her. She was just warehoused. They over-diagnosed her, saying it was advanced dementia, when, in fact, it was mild dementia at that time.

It fell on me as the logical choice as primary care-giver at the time. When I announced this intention, her case worker became quite vile to me. She acted, quite frankly, as if I was stealing my aunt's money from them.

They announced that my aunt had advanced dementia (she didn't) and needed to be with them. I pointed out how terrified my aunt was of them, they said that was just her dementia speaking. They even investigated me for criminal connections or activity in an attempt to prove I was unqualified. This failed.

When they finally realized they had no way to keep her, they insisted that it was themselves who should line up all support service for her in-home care, and they needed to keep her another 15 days to accomplish this. I was required to fire everyone I had hired, and dismissed all other services I had lined up. The CNAs the nursing home lined up were almost as qualified as the ones I had hired, and they cost considerably more.

Five years passed, and circumstances necessitated a move. I placed my aunt in a nursing home for two months while I packed, moved, and set up. This time I did better research before picking a place. This place did pay attention to my aunt. Her hair, dentistry, nails and facial hair were attended to. She seemed, if not happy, at least complacent there. She had considerably deteriorated, tho, and I questioned my ability to care for her now. But, I decided to try. If it didn't work out, at least I wanted her someplace closer to my new home.

I met with a rude awakening when I went to pick her up. They would not release her to me. They gave me a list of what they wanted me to accomplish before they would release her. It took a month to accomplish this. When I finally went to pick her up, she was a mess. Although they had taken well care of her when she first arrived, they apparently stopped when they realized I was serious about taking her home. Her hair was long and straggely, as were her nails. Her facial hair had turned into a beard. She was in a wheelchair, and they told me she could no longer walk. Almost all her clothes and personnal property was missing although her name was on everything.

When we arrived at home, to my surprise, I was met by an investigator from the Dept of Elder Abuse. Since no one knew we were here yet, I presume it was the nursing home who called them.

I have had my aunt at the new house now two weeks. She has clamed down considerably, has expressed relief at finally being home. Ater two days at home in a wheelchair, she suddenly got up and walked around. In the nursing home, she would not interact with me and I never saw her interacting with staff. Now we were having conversations. She was delighted to see her cats again. I have no doubt it was a right move to bring her home.

Meanwhile, Elder Abuse has called me and I have been informed it is their choice to take her from me. My lawyer called them, and they told her they have no question of my plans and good intentions, only that they feel my aunt requires too much care, and they don't believe ultimately I can do it.

Meanwhile I AM doing it. The benefits to my aunt are obviously visible.

What's going on? I suspect money. Here are the figures:

The first nursing home (the hell-hole) billed me $1000 a day ($30,000 a month). Nursing homes are expensive, but NONE charges THAT much! The second nursing home charged me $13,000 a month. Also very expense. My aunt has enough resources to last a year there, no more. At home, her expenses are running $5,000 a month. Still expensive, but I can keep her 2 1/2 years at that price. Now here's the kicker! Whatever a nursing home charges private pay, Medicare only pays out one fixed rate: approx $7,000 a month. So, having a private pay client is a real plum for a nursing home!

I am not impressed that nursing homes seem to feel they have a right to claim my aunt's money as their right.
Helpful Answer (0)
Report

i think in many cases aps is in cahoots with NH and hospice to not only tear elders from their homes but seize control of their assets. a hospice patient who lives too long outlives the per patient cap that medicare will pay for hospice and hospice either begins losing money on the patient or increases their level of care. ( institutionalize them ) i do not trust the system and think elders should only be institutionalized when they are too far gone to suffer placement shock. i have an aunt in IL right now. she sleeps all the time, doesnt care about socializing and only dreams of going home. utopia it isnt..
Helpful Answer (0)
Report

I can only speak to my own experiece. We were commited to keeping mom at home, but incresing anxiety and isolation made her so needy that there was a crisis a day. She has gotten much stronger and more accepting of life's ups and downs in independent living, and has better and more consistent medical care,
Helpful Answer (1)
Report

The more I read here from different posters from different areas of the US, I think the APS do have ulterior motives. And it sure isn't the welfare of the "client." I have also read how NH was able to gain POA over their client.

Weby, I hope you got a very good lawyer. I hope you win. Because once NH runs out of your aunt's money, they will dismiss her from their care. So, where is APS when this happens?
Helpful Answer (1)
Report

The NH in my community is a lovely facility but the staff are overworked, and under paid, encouraged to be critical of other staff, most have little insight into how to deal with people with dementia and the head nurse runs the place like a prison camp. Most residents are in a wheelchair within weeks after entering. then they are pushed in lines in front of a TV with cartoons on for hours at a time. In no time at all the residents lose touch with reality. Who wouldn't? There will be no one to care for me when I get old. I sincerely hope I go toes-up in my flowerbed!
Helpful Answer (0)
Report

We shopped like crazy for somewhere for my Grandma. Had found an assisted living that was really nice, but ironically she broke her hip the day she was going to look at it (had agreed to move there after driving past it and seeing the gardens-- both my aunts practically died of shock!).
She ended up in a 6 person board & care that is amazing -- great food, family are more than welcome all day long, any day, & she is "queen bee" because she doesn't have dementia, just physical issues. The dementia residents have to be well-behaved (for everyone's safety), but I think the 1-3 caregiver ratio prevents a lot of acting out that would happen at a larger "memory care" facility (1-17 ratios were common!)
The main difference is that the residents & caregivers become a family where everyone belongs. Every day my grandmother interacts with at least 7 other people who KNOW her -- residents & caregivers. They laugh & talk at meals, accept each other's limitations & care about each other (it DOES make it hard when someone dies, but better thinking that no one around cares about you).
Helpful Answer (3)
Report

This question has been closed for answers. Ask a New Question.
Ask a Question
Subscribe to
Our Newsletter