My mom has history of falling. Like 5-7 times over past 2 years. Never seriously injured, but that now is a great concern. She was in hospital recently, and the social worker came in and said the doctor thought at this point she should go to skilled nursing home. I avoided that for now, and had her go to a rehab-2-home facility. She is doing alot better, but I am extremely concerned. I can't lift her, so if she needs extra support getting up or falls I can't do it. Last time I called the fire dept. The man was very rude, and said they will call DSS if it's 3 calls in a week. Never has it been that often. Every few months. I walked away and had to cry because I felt horrible that I can't get her up and then someone be so mean to just help us out. They weren't putting out a fire at the moment. I called 911 and that's who they sent. Anyhow, this is a horrible decision to have to make, and I don't want to make it. We will have a care plan meeting when she gets discharged from the rehab, and I plan to take her to weekly physical therapy. Any tips, advice, suggestions, or just words of support would help alot now!! Thanks, and have blessed new week! God bless.
In a nursing home, there will be acitivities, events, walking protocols and the eagle eyes of nurses who will notice changes in your mom's condition. This would be (and was) a no brainer for me.
It doesn't work any more. That is really the moment for AL or for a nursing home. When the situation just doesn't work anymore.
With my mom, she couldn't remember to take her meds, she could not be left alone (which meant we were trapped in the house and could never go anywhere together), she got nervous and confused about junk mail.
When my mother suddenly declined due to congestive heart failure coupled with kidney failure, the two conditions combined into a perfect storm of symptoms that caused her heart to stop briefly - but long enough that she passed out and fell out of her chair, striking her head and slicing it open down to the bone. If I (or someone) had not been here to get her the help she needed, she would have died, because she didn't have the presence of mind to even turn herself over - and she was bleeding profusely from the head wound. If that wasn't a wake-up call, I don't know what could be. I kept her at home as long as possible, but this situation didn't get any better, and I had to place her in nursing home about a month later.
She left the burners on, she let strangers into the house and told them all about herself,
she didn't know where to go to get cash,
she wanted to close down the bank account into which all of her money was automatically deposited,
she drove the car into the side of the garage (TWICE!).
It was not working anymore. Boy, did I take along time to figure that out!!!!
You make a good point about the firefighters' role by pointing out, "when you take them away for a call like picking her up they may miss one for someone having a heart attack that actually needs them or a house on fire or a car accident."
I have two points here. First, this is a difficult decision that would be best handled with someone who is more familiar with your mother's condition and the available resources in your area, e.g. the social worker at the rehab center. Second, you are fortunate that you have the time your mother is in rehab to research facilities in your area, if that is what is determined to be best for all concerned. Check out facilities in the evening and/or weekends and talk to the staff, not just administration.
Here is a possible alternative resource for you. There is a growing movement to create networks of volunteers and service providers that help keep seniors in their homes longer called the Village to Village Network. They may not be operational yet, but could have some helpful ideas.
And one more point: that fireman is a jerk. You have my sympathy.
May God bless.
Here's another scenario because you often hear cases where a patient wanders off:
Let's say your loved one wanders off in the night while you're sleeping. Let's say they wander down a lonely road and maybe worse yet into the woods. Just like the story about a young boy who was found alone in the forest, switch roles, putting your loved one in the boy's shoes. Instead of someone sending your love one into the forest, imagine if your loved one wandered off from your home and into the forest. If your loved one got lost in the forest, remember no one is there to help if they fall. This is why PT should teach patients with fall issues how to pick themselves up if they ever tripped over something and fall. That can happen to anyone at any age, and knowing how to pick yourself up is a very important skill that comes in handy when you most need it. It sounds to me like as people age they forget this is very important skill, and they may need help remembering how to help themselves.
Assisted living has 24/7 staff, trained nurses, etc. The point I'm making is that, if assisted living cannot safely care for and monitor a person who is unsteady enough to fall on a regular basis then it is 10x harder and dangerous for a single person to deal with those issues in a home environment.
It took about 6 months to find the right place and I had to hire a senior care consultant to find the right place that met our financial, location, and quality limits..
We tried moving her to independent living at the facility (it was so sweet! 4th floor overlooking a lake and sunset), but, over the course of the next few days, she wasn't remembering where she lived and wasn't making sense with who she met.. She was getting lost wasn't going to the dining rooms at the community. She too started burning pans.. So the director recommended Assisted Living...primarily cause they can't recommend her living alone if she can't find her way home, as well as her neighbor saying she repeats herself and forgets who they are.
God bless!