My mom has Dementia and is becoming very tired and is starting to not want to eat. She sometimes hides her food I give her so she can throw it away after. She is using her walker and does do somethings for herself but that would only be to maybe wash a few dishes or go to the bathroom. If I tell her we are going out for a drive or a walk she is excited about that but to get her there is exhausting for her. She is 90 and otherwise very healthy.....
Some people can be on Hospice programs for years and some are only on it for a short time. Talk with your mother's doctors to decide if it's time for a Hospice program. The hospice program my grandma was on, allowed her to go anywhere, but she had to stay close to home incase we ran into a problem and she needed medical attention, if she left the state and was to be admitted to the hospital, she would be dropped from the program and our process would start all over. Ultimately on her own, she knew if she went to the hospital after this fall, she wasn't coming home and her wish was to not die in a hospital. Against the rest of the family's wish, we honored grandma's wish and made the last 4 weeks very comfortable for her.
It's case by case, but when I read about hospice care, most families said they saw rapid decline in their loved one. If in your heart you feel that this is the beginning of the end, speak with mom's doctors and care advisors and see what they say. Best advice would be if Hospice is the only other option left, go with an at home hospice care.
My first suggestion is keep in mind that enrolling in hospice is not irreversible. Many people eschew hospice because of its connotations. It can feel like giving up. It's not. It's just another service that might be optimal for your parent. And you can always quit it at any time.
Hospice visiting nurses are often great at addressing issues including pain management, wasting (extreme weight loss), and the psychological stress suffered by caregivers.
The biggest downside can be that joining hospice might trigger a reduction in home care services. In New York, at least, for the Medicaid/Medicare patients I treated as an RN, hospice was a "Medicare only" program. That meant that hospice could not bill Medicaid, and patients were limited to only the limited number of home health aide hours that their Medicare covered. Because Medicaid was so much more generous regarding HHAs, these patients often lost important services by joining hospice home care.
Research that issue with your doctor or a social worker. Of course, I don't know what insurance you have or even what state you live in. Just be aware that hospice can trigger some restrictive insurance issues-- But not necessarily in your case. I just recommend that you check it out.
Also, it sounds like you're handling this all on your own. I recommend that you look into getting an aide even if you don't go the hospice route.
The other issue about hospice is that you agree to forego any treatments that suggest an effort to cure or reverse disease. Be sure that you're not forfeiting treatments you want to continue using. I encourage you to speak with you doctor about this.
And finally (sorry to be so long-winded), joining a hospice program is reversible. If you decide you want to get more aggressive about medical interventions than hospice will allow, you can usually drop hospice at a moment's notice and go back to a more aggressive insurance plan. Again, this is something you might want to talk to your doctor about.
Good luck. It's a hard situation, but it really sounds as if your doing a terrific job with it.
For my own self care I am listening to uplifting music in my earbuds, taking bubblebaths, petting my dog, doing iron yoga and planting seeds up in my greenhouse. I send my appreciation and support to all of you out there who have not heard the word 'thank you' or gotten that ever elusive kudo or a hug.
I'd say call hospice when medical interventions will no longer help her. Make sure that the doctors/nurses explain what can be done to assist her, and that you comfortably understand her condition. In my case, I'd really grilled her doctor, and felt comfortable in my decision.
The following are the criteria for determining whether someone with dementia qualifies for hospice care:
a€¢ Unable to ambulate (walk) without assistance
• Unable to dress without assistance
• Unable to bathe properly
• Urinary and fecal incontinence
• Unable to speak or communicate meaningfully
• And suffer from at least one complication
– Aspiration pneumonia, Upper UTI’s, Recurrent fever after antibiotics
– Signs of a recent stroke
– Decubitus ulcers (multiple stages 3-4)
– Difficulty swallowing or refusing food.
Unless your mom meets these condition, then hospice is not advisable. And as you have stated she is 90 and otherwise healthy, so you might want to think that over because hospice care usually deals with long term care recipients who are terminally ill. But if there is a need for hospice, you should be able to get it sooner before it is too late. I suggest you talk to her doctor.
You need to contact your local Hospice chapter to find out how it works there and what they can offer where your mother lives. They will evaluate what your mother needs and what-when-how they can provide any help. Good luck to you.
The only way to start hospice is to get a doctor to write an order for a hospice evaluation. If the hospice agency says yes she is eligible then the patient/family decide on which hospice agency. Then if the family says yes to having hospice then either the original ordering md or the hospice md have to write another order to have medicare pay for the hospice because that order states Med. necessity. Neither order can be written by the doctor unless he thinks she will be dead in 6 months. Even though the agency would love to get to them early it usually won't work that way as most mds won't write the order even for the eval.
Medicaid for any maternal health programs or kids programs - like WIC - is not under MERP. But most states have MERP allowed for any long term provided service for the elderly as MERP is designed to be done via probate.