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My mom fell and broke her hip in March. She is 86 years old. She went to rehab at a skilled care facility. She is nearly strong enough to walk, but she must use a walker. The facility tested her for dementia and has diagnosed her with moderate dementia. She has fallen three times in the past two months at the facility because she doesn't call a nurse and tries to walk without a walker. My wife and I as POA totally agree with the facility staff that the safest place for her is at the facility.


The problem is with my dad. He is 90 years old and they have been married for 65 years. They have really never been apart. We believe he may have some dementia (he has never been diagnosed), but if he does, it is mild. He simply cannot live with her being at a skilled care facility. He insists that she must come home.


We can see that her dementia is getting worse. She confuses dreams with reality and even before she was at the care facility she didn't take care of the house, the cooking, the finances, etc. We are certain that if she came home she would fall again and may take him with her. They cannot afford 24x7 at home care and he insists that they don't need it - even though she can't even use the bathroom by herself.


Now my father says he is going to call a lawyer and get her out. Should we tell him she has dementia and the facility is the best place for her? His own health is worsening as a result of this episode and we are concerned that telling him this might make him give up.

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I think he deserves honesty. I hope he’ll be able to accept the diagnosis. Be prepared to help him in understanding, perhaps by having a medical professional talking with him about the news and what to expect going forward
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MCHSMH Jun 2020
Thank you for responding. We agree - he deserves honesty. We are just concerned about how he will take it. Still we think honesty will be the best in the long run. We have an appointment with his doctor this week. We've had issues garnering support from his doctor in the past. We are hoping for better support this time. We'll see how it goes. Thank you again!
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Since he is still capable of understanding, YES, tell him. Tell him it is NOT safe for her to go home. He can visit her, right? Often? It will have to do. It would be a HUGE mistake for him to take her home. There's just about no way a 90 year old is going to be able to take good care of someone that can barely walk and can't use the bathroom by herself.

Yes, dad, we understand that this is not what you and mom really wanted to happen. But things have happened that no one could have known were coming. She needs to be safe. etc.

Good luck.
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MCHSMH Jun 2020
Thank you for your reply and a hearty Amen to your answer! We totally agree! We take him to visit her as often as possible. Right now we can only visit through a window at the facility and over the phone. We will be in much better shape if the world can get coronavirus in check. We live only a few miles away from the facility where she is staying. We'd love to be able to occasionally bring her to our house for an afternoon and have him here with her too. Sadly, we cannot do that right now. I think when that day comes he will be much more accepting to where she is. Thank you again!
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I agree he needs to be told. During a doctor's visit would be good and perhaps some planning for his future could be done then too. It would be great if the two of them could be in the same facility, This is a huge change for both of them, but obviously they need some help and a safe environment. It would be good to have him evaluated too for a baseline. Do you have POA for him too? This is a time to get all paperwork in order,

Good luck for all of what has to be done. These transition times are difficult. Be sure to look after yourselves too and let us know how things develop.
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MCHSMH Jun 2020
Thank you for your response. Fortunately we got the POA in order for both of them just last year. We now take care of all their finances - paying bills, income tax preparation, etc. We agree this is a huge change for them. We are trying not to push too hard, yet we want to make sure both of them are safe. Thank you again for your response!
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You should tell him.
Are there options?
Can she be placed in Memory Care...and can he live with her even if he does not yet require that level of care? Many facilities will do this for couples. If this is an option it might be good for him as well since he is showing signs himself.
If she is not quite ready for Memory Care, and he still wants to care for her as much as possible would Assisted Living with a Memory Care unit be an option? Again he would be able to stay with her, help her and when it became overwhelming for him she could transition to Memory Care and he could still be there for her.
It is very possible that without her he will decline more rapidly.
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MCHSMH Jun 2020
Thank you for your response. We have considered the alternatives you suggested. He still lives in the house in which he grew up. So getting him to leave will be difficult. We are in complete agreement with you though that we think this would be best for both of them. We are going to keep working with him on these alternatives. Maybe someday he will see that these are for the best. Thank you again!
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MCHSMH The way I understand your problem, you need a good way to tell your dad that he needs to be in a facility with Mom or at least one with varying degrees of Help.  My folks were married 67 years when Dad died.
His dementia was worse than Moms.  She figured she could take care of him with our Help.  Well, We had no alternative.  We got Dad all signed up for the local AL and then to 'visit' with Mom.  Finally, after many different approaches, from....you can't do this...… all the way to many explanations why none of us could take them into our homes.   We Told Her She Would be doing Dad a big favor by going with him.   (She certainly did not want to be left alone!)  And it worked.  Will never know if we just wore her down, if she finally saw that she could not do it 'alone', or if her love for him was so ingrained and true and to do this for him was OK.  I also told her she could go and be unhappy and miserable, or she could go and make the best of it, taking advantage of someone else cooking and cleaning. But there was no other choice. they were going to AL.   God Bless You as travel this road.  When the people we love and have depended on for so many years for so many things....change into someone we hardly know, it is very hard and often frustrating along the way.  Make sure you know that your dad knows how much you love him.  Today!!
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MCHSMH Jun 2020
Thanks. We like the approach of telling him that he would be doing her a big favor by going with her. That along with some meetings with her caregivers and doctors could be enough to nudge him in that direction. We certainly hope so as we feel AL would be the best for him and especially a place where the facility has skilled care for the care she needs. Thanks again!
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I was in a similar situation back in 2014 when my father fell & broke his hip. He & mom were living in an Independent Living apartment together at the time, he was 90 and she was 86, they'd been married for 68 years at the time. After having his hip repaired at the hospital, dad went to a SNF for rehab. They did not want to release him because of his mobility issues in addition to a brain tumor, but there was no way I could leave him there in the nursing home and my mother in the IL apartment! He'd pine away w/o her.......and she was a nervous wreck to live alone. So, by the grace of God, I found them an Assisted Living Facility where they could move in TOGETHER, that would do the trick.....get dad the care he needed and keep my mother safe (she was starting down the dementia highway at that time and also having some mobility issues).

My father wound up passing away 11 months later and my mother is still alive, at 93, and now living in the Memory Care building of the ALF. Thank GOD I placed them when I did, too, because it turned out to be more necessary for my mother than my father.

Keep in mind that your mother's dementia will appear MUCH worse right now that she's been through a trauma and is trying to recuperate in a SNF. She can get back to a better baseline once she's back in familiar surroundings, or back with her husband.

If you can get them both placed together in an Assisted Living Facility that ALSO has a Memory Care section, that would be your best bet to keep them together and to address mother's dementia as it worsens. In the worst case scenario, if she begins to wander, she can move into a Memory Care unit and dad can stay in the AL section and they can visit, still.

24/7 in home care is really not viable, cost wise, I looked into it myself back in 2014. Let your dad know the TRUTH about what's happening with his wife; you owe him that and he needs to know. If you can keep them together, come what may, your father's health will probably improve. Keeping them apart is like amputating the man's leg.........he won't be able to live without it, you know?

I will never forget the look of gratitude and peace on my father's face when he saw my mother walking down the hall of the ALF on the day she was finally moving in with him. It brings tears to my eyes even now

Wishing you the best of luck moving forward. This is a difficult time, I know, and I am sending you a hug and a prayer
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MCHSMH Jun 2020
Thank you for responding. Always nice to hear from someone who has been through a very similar situation and things worked out well. I've heard from others that her dementia would lessen if she got back to familiar surroundings. There are several very nice ALF's near where we live. We are hoping we can convince my dad living with her in a place where she can get the care she needs would be best. We'll keep working on it. Thank you so much for your support!
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I would use caution about bringing her home for a visit. It may be confusing to her, we brought my FIL home once and you could see he was scared and confused, or she may refuse to go back. How would FIL handle her causing a scene when it was time to return?  It may also be more difficult for FIL to accept that she cannot move home. He may reason that if she can come home for a visit she can come home to stay. Understandably it will be difficult to get him to move from the family home but maybe if is goal is to be with her he may be willing to try it “for now”
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Your father likely has dementia. He may have vascular dementia. His lack of judgment and saying they don’t need help are indicators. My FIL seemed fine, but his problem solving, and judgment were impaired. So he seemed fine until we really started digging into things and I started going to doctors with him. My MIL had dementia and when I started asking him how he saw the future and what he wanted, he was able to realize they needed to move. They should have gone to assisted living with memory care as an option. They had previously been adamant that they did not want to move. He kept saying, I can’t move. When I finally asked why the reason was not that he was so attached to the house. He said they had so much stuff he could not figure out where to start.
Her LTC policy should cover assisted living for her. Look for a place for both of them. A one bedroom apartment so they can be together. When she is ready for discharge from rehab, she could go there. They are both at risk from Covid if they go into a facility but that will be the case for a year. They really need 24 hour supervision. We paid $10,000 for a 24/7 live in Plus IL for a short while when they were in independent living. He fell and was hospitalized and she could not be left alone. So you could bring her home but if he won’t agree to having someone there, it is only a matter of time before she falls again. She will fall even with care in place. It is a tough situation and I basically lived it with my in-laws. For us, placement for both worked but Covid makes it all So complicated.
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MCHSMH Jun 2020
Thanks for your response. You are so right - Covid really complicated this. We are also in a situation in which he feels he can't move - basically because he has nearly always lived in the same house - and they have so much stuff WE can't figure out where to start. But that is the least of our problems. Our goal is to get them to a place where they are safe and together. We just need to keep working with my dad to help him understand that. Thank you again for your response. This site has been a godsend to us. Caring people who have lived through similar situations and provide good advice. It is exactly what we need!
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Time for a family meeting with her doctor. Your father must be in attendance. Let the doctor explain your mother's medical problems. You can bring up the lack of finances for 24/7 care. It might be time for both of them to live with others who can care for them. Many places allow married couples to share a room.
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MCHSMH Jun 2020
Thank you for your reply. Her doctor has been less than helpful on this front in the past, but the doctor at her care facility is much better. We are considering setting up a meeting with that doctor to have my mom's medical problems explained to her. We'll keep guiding him towards assisted living. We really feel an assisted living facility that can also provide the care she needs would be best for both of them. Thank you!
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I think it might actually be helpful if he feels more informed and involved in the decision making but based on experience the way, how and who, it’s presented will make a huge difference. My suggestion would be to have your ducks in order first, does the facility she’s in have apartments or larger rooms for couples and are there others there? Do they have a choice of living situations and what safe options are there for your mom and dad together as well as mom on her own? Maybe even check into other facilities and options at least just preliminarily that have a compromise he might be more inclined to agree with if need be.

Im just guessing but based on your info that visitors aren’t allowed inside I’m guessing you have been having care meetings by video and this is how/when they let you know the results of her assessment and recommendations. Assuming that’s correct or that it could be set up that way, I would suggest communicating with the doctor, caregivers and case manager, everyone involved and giving you feedback about including Dad in a care meeting so they can present the info to him along with you and your wife and any other family members who should be involved or simply might get in Dads ear if they aren’t.

A couple important things to keep everyone aware of ahead of time, first I would be very careful about how the reason for evaluating mom for dementia is explained. Dad might resist joining her or even other medical situations for fear that he will be evaluated or “labeled”. It might even be best to focus on Mom’s current physical limitations as being the reason for keeping her there and you will know best but if he needs to believe there is the possibility they can both move back to the house he grew up in if the doctor is satisfied she has met certain goals it might not be as bad a thing as it feels to allow even though you know she never will meet those goals. Big baby steps. But allow the medical professionals to explain where they feel she is, where she could go and their recommendations basically the way they have already for you. Maybe even ask if they aren’t clear enough for Dad to hear, what will be the challenges and what could happen if she were to go home with Dad and what are the possibilities, advantages if she stays under some sort of full time professional care. Then you as a family can talk about the living options and allow Dad to be part of the decision as to what is best for he and his wife. If being together is best for both of them and having access to 24 hr help/care is best for her maybe he will decide to give up his house for now to be with and support her. Maybe not too, maybe he will want to leave things the way they are or maybe another compromise will materialize. No one is going o get exactly what they want here, everyone is loosing something including you, you want your parents independent in their home same as they do but that’s no longer possible and each of you need your own path to realize and accept that. I would be gentle, caring and honest with your dad, keep trying to put yourself in his shoes, it’s so scary loosing all the things he is right now and don’t take all the difficult news delivery on yourself let the professionals deliver it first while you provide the back bone for helping him hear it.

Difficult times, I know, my thoughts are with you and your family.
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MCHSMH Jun 2020
Thanks for your reply. We'll continue to try to gently, carefully guide this situation in a way that will benefit them both and in a way in which my dad can see and understand the benefit. We think having a meeting with the caregiver and my dad is a very good idea. We'll start working towards that and see where we get. Thank you again for your reply.
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