Oh well, i guess we will stay home. i did feel some relief with that decision. I'm not sure why. I think she is farther along in her disease than I wanted to admit. Took the weekend off and my eldest daughter stayed with her. The earth didn't shift off its axis! Someone wrote a blog about keeping mom at home, but can't remember who it was, but I think it's the right thing to do. Hugs to all you caretakers out there! tonio
I don't agree with nikiaplaygirl on this issue.
I might agree to "It is often best to keep mom at home." I might be talked into "It is usually best to keep mom at home." But always? Uh-uh. No way.
Too many factors enter into it. Best for whom would need to be defined. And whether we are talking best financially or quality or care or preservation of sanity. Then, what are the specific care needs? Is dementia involved? What equipment is needed? What kinds of emergencies are typical of this condition and how can they be met? What was/is the relationship between Mom and the at-home caregivers? Was Mom loving and nurturing or abusive and cruel?
We have seen evidence over and over on these boards that it is definitely not ALWAYS best to keep Mom (or Dad or Spouse) home. Often? -- sure. Usually? Maybe. Always? No, that just isn't true.
I'm not trying to pick nits here, but it seems to be unrealistic to perpetuate the myth that home care is always the best option. It is hard enough to make a decision for placement when that is clearly necessary without having to find stereotypes that don't match reality.
Imho there is nothing like going and visiting a # of places in the area where your parents will be living. See what your community does that is considered IL - independent living, AL and NH or other SNF "skilled nursing facility".Go to the real expensive ones too as well as those located in more low income area and see what your $$ supposedly will buy. Do you really want to be underwriting the payment on the huge and manicured lawn and entry way and the big atrium? Just so much of AL places, for me, are all about selling the visual prettiness of the place to the family as all this is about capturing the private pay market for as long as possible. In most states AL is not within the Medicaid payment system so it is all private pay and expensive. Just a few states do a Medicaid waiver for AL . From what I've heard those that do waivers have waiting lists usually based on preference given to those that are closer to being at the income and asset level needed for Medicaid NH acceptance.
For my mom, her IL (which is in Texas and was private pay) sounded like what LindaGS described as AL. My late MIL, her very, very old NH which was paid for by Medicaid, was really more of an IL as she had her own apt (this was in Louisiana). So they can be very different based on community. My mom's IL was part of a "tiered" system that went from IL to AL to NH and did hospice within the NH. The IL was a 48 unit 3 story apt building and they went downstairs for 2 meals a day and the activities was in another building. The AL and NH were in a whole other huge building that you could walk to easily from the IL. My mom's IL was for profit (but underwritten by a protestant ministry) and part of a larger for-profit group that also does senior retirement communities that require a $$$$ buy-in.
For AL & NH, what I've found is the residents rooms are basically all the same as there are set federal standards on that; a big difference is how they do a community rooms and how the nurses stations are set up - like is the dining room just used as a dining room and there is a separate activities room. The older places are bigger and they have rooms for both dining and activities and the residents can spend more time eating or doing a crafts project as there is no rush to get the place cleared. For whatever reason, NH residents all mill around the nurses station. My mom has been in 2 NH: 1 was a long hall design with a central hub in the middle for the nurses station. There was always tension as there just is never enough room. Her new place is an X design so the nurses station has lots more room and the residents do seem to visit each other more.
Be realistic about what you can & cannot get your parents to do with minor or major motivation (or threat or legal) on your and your siblings part.This site is filled with posts from folks who are worn out, burned out from taking care of family and just cannot figure out how to get out from under the burden that well meaning caregiving has turned into for them. Caregiving for the elderly or for family with dementia is never easy and it is not for everybody. You have to often be bitterly realistic to yourself about if you can and what their needs truly are.
I'm pretty ocd on stuff and NH is still is pretty maddening to deal with. Remember they have to be recertified for Medicaid annually (well it's that way for my mom who is in Texas) so keep up with paperwork as you have a very short # of days to get all required documents in. All the states are facing shortfalls in income, so if you're late on getting paperwork in, they will remove them from the "granted" roll
as it shows the state is doing what it can to remove "not needed spending"
One thing I'd suggest you do at one of her care plan meetings is go over each and every page of her binder to make sure they have the right paperwork on her - not so much the medical but that they have the correct funeral home to contact, if she had a DNR that is is signed off by whomever it needs to be (often it has to be a new one with the NH medical directors signature), that the correct SS and insurance numbers are down. And preselect a hospice group and have that request in her binder. Doing this when you are not under pressure is just so much easier.
And also the paperwork if they are allowed to do certain things above the normal
(I don't live close so on her personal needs trust fund I've signed off on to allow for the activities director to buy stuff for her) that the paperwork is all correct on that.
You should think about getting your mom into a NH as it will likely be soon that she really will need that level of skilled care, rather than AL. When they are living at home, getting this done is difficult to do as most NH admissions come from their needing "rehabilitation" after discharge from a 3 day minimum hospital stay and the rehab unit is within a NH. Then after the Medicare paid rehab days, they move into the NH and have a detailed medical history to back up the need for "skilled nursing" and can then apply for Medicaid to pay for the NH.
For those living at home, they often just don't have the documented needed medical that passes Medicaid review for NH care.
My mom was living in her home and moved into IL, then after a couple of years moved into NH. I basically forced her to move from her home - she wasn't happy about it but it needed to be done. She probably has Lewy Body Dementia. Her gerontology MD is part of a group who also are the medical directors of some NH's. They were great in understanding the need for NH placement rather than AL - now I do think a lot of this for my mom was easier because of her advanced age (in her 90's) so NH is gonna happen eventually. What her doc did was change her meds from Exelon pill to patch - as the patch needs more "skill" to do; she had a heart med added to give her a chronic care condition; her weight was monitored as a change in weight of more than 10% is a critical care issue and she had been on Megace for 6 mos and no lasting weight gain; and did bloodwork often and monitored her H & H again because this is a critical care issue. So basically building her documented need for skilled nursing so she could get into NH. She saw the docs every 4 to 6 weeks and as soon as the weight loss was @ 11% the order for NH needed was done. There is no way a family medicine doc is going to know this and what the latest requirements are from the state for NH acceptance but the medical directors at a NH are. Just being old or having dementia is not enough to require NH. The docs who are medical directors at a NH know what needs to be done to pass the review. Get it? Good luck.
I concur about A Place for Mom. They can be a great place to start, but not every community lists with them. You may be missing out on considering some of the smaller communities, many of which, in our area, are the best ones. Start talking about it with anyone and everyone in the areas you're looking. See what the general opinion is about the communities you're looking at. A place can get an undeserved bad rep, but usually, if you consider more than one opinion, you'll get a general feel for the best communities in the area.
A Place for Mom and their advisors are great, but you have to keep in mind that they are also compensated for placing your loved one in a community that pays to have A Place for Mom tell families about them... There are plenty of great communities that don't have a contract with that company so don't sell your Mom short by giving your complete trust that one of the communities they've pointed you is the ideal choice. I would advise you to utilize their service, as it is free to you and they are a great resource, but also do some research on your own so you can decide for yourself.
I'm sorry you may have felt misled about the pricing, but I hope it doesn't deter you from the idea of an assisted living community. I commend you for deciding to care for your Mom yourself, but please also know that many communities offer short-term respite stays... So rather than your daughter filling in while you need a break, you and your daughter could take a weekend trip and relax with some quality bonding time. It's important that you take care of yourself too! We have several families that bring their loved 2 or 3 times a year so they can take a two-week respite. Sometimes they travel, but sometimes they just catch up on things at home. Their family members really enjoy it too, because they can socialize and participate in different kinds of activities.
My Dad is in his last days, after living with us ten months. I know it was the right thing to do for him, AND it is exhausting beyond imagining. Even with help. Dementia makes the behavior so predictable you are on alert all the time. I wish you all the best, I truly do. Had I understood what we were all in for, I would not have taken him into my home. But at the time, I didn't see the full picture: just what a "dutiful and loving daughter" SHOULD do. The cost to my health, to the rest of the family, and strain on my husband so outweighed the good it did my father.
Line up paid help to pitch in before there is a crisis. I didn't and wish I had. Don't discount the impact this has on the rest of your family. Do what you need to stay healthy ... If you are scrimping on sleep and eating badly, burning the candle on both ends, just to keep things afloat, then stop and reassess. Don't assume your daughter is on call to back you up all the time...find other resources, or she could start to resent you before either of you sees it coming.
Truly, good luck. Sending love your way.