Mom spent 2 days in the hospital to recover from high blood pressure, swelling in legs and feet. She moved to rehab for PT. Dr's want her to not live alone due to her advanced dementia frequent falls. Searching for assisted living to move her from rehab without returning her to her home. Feeling guilty, but know this must be done. Anyone have similar experience or thoughts? We had discussions and she agreed to let me handle this move, but dementia changes her feelings daily to distrust anger resentment towards me.
Tell yourself 100x a day that you’re getting your mom the best care you can because you are. It’s a lousy situation and you’re picking the least lousy option.
Long story short my mom had a stroke & I moved her from the rehab to MC . This was when our area was literally the epicenter of the covid pandemic, it was an insane task to do at that insane time.
One thing that helped TONS was the MC gave me a basic packing list. I’m sure other MCs do too, or you might find a list online.
Minimal stuff is recommended, but if your mom is super high energy ( disregard here if not ) I did something slightly opposite. I put a bit too much stuff in mom’s room. That way when she arrived she had a couple of boxes and framed pictures to pick through and it gave her some control in an uncontrollable situation. This also was a needed distraction. I told her I was happy to move stuff she didn’t want out and she appreciated that.
Another tip imho is, after you’ve budgeted and looked at places, places that acccept Medicaid, etc…it’s worth it to look for ‘hidden’ MC’s in retirement complexes. My mom was in an apartment in a place with graduated care and ended up in their MC. It’s very small and for a while I thought I’d have to move her to a bigger one. However over time I realized that the staff is SO kind, and there is hardly any turnover, the kindness just begets more kindness in that facility. It’s clean, calm, and people really care. Residents of the regular apartments donate money to the little MC and come visit. There have always been a few extra beds and I think that’s because it’s embedded in their complex and not advertised. The priority is for MC care for residents there, but they’re open to others as well. It might not have all the bells and whistles, and for a while I didn’t like how the different levels of residents mixed, but honestly I can say that if you find a place with kind staff and hardly any turnover you have STRUCK GOLD.
I also have to add that mom’s care is paid for by selling her house….
So sorry you have to deal with this. Fyi my mom also would never be happy anywhere and I was the recipient of daily incessant complaints. It’s really hard. Go back to the top of all my yammering and repeat the part about giving your mom the best care you can. ( I still have to do it daily )
huge hug and let us know how it goes!
Keep in mind she may need more care now than an AL facility can provide. They may recommend NH now. If she's in a rehab that also has NH beds, start with them. Possible they will just move her to NH area and free up the rehab bed. Then she won't have to actually 'move' to another facility.
you have good advice given so far! Put your thoughts of guilt and so on and so forth away and know ,you are doing what needs to be done
I tell my mom whatever keeps her happy and adjusted and so far it is working well. A few days after she came to “visit me for a while”, she began to ask if I thought it was time for her to give up her home and I was completely honest with her. Next day, she’d forgotten the conversation but the thought is there and pops up from time to time. I’ve told her that the time will come when she needs more care but we aren’t there just yet.
You know your mom better than anyone else so you do what works for you. If you can figure out her mood first, only discuss this on days when it’s good. M
i wish you all the best in dealing with this.
Be sure that you have the POA papers signed that officially give you authority to make decisions for her.
Conferring with Elder Care attorney is often helpful.
Otherwise, choose the ALF of choice, prior to discharge and have her transported directly there.
You can of course tell her about all the decisions, but remember that she may or may not remember the conversations and continuing to " explain" it, leads only to more anxiety, grief, which often is expressed as " anger".
Try not to feel guilty, her outrages will be related to her condition. Just keep telling her that her new home is to keep her safe and that her doctor says she cannot go home yet.
This new position feels foreign and uncomfortable and just plain sad.
We are now members of a club for which we’ve never applied. Stuck in a seemingly endless cycle of uncertainty and grief.
I’m sorry that you and your Mom are in this place. The people on this forum have helped me keep my sanity!
Feeling 'guilty' is not the right word, b/c it's not OUR doing that they're in this place in life to begin with. Grief is a better word; sadness that their lives have to be disrupted to THIS degree where everything is turned upside down. Right? Anyway, I digress. My sainted DH & I moved most of her things from her apt in AL over to her new suite of rooms in the Memory Care while she was in rehab. I fixed it up almost identically to how it was in AL, albeit being a smaller area with less square footage & NO kitchen. This is what you need to do: set her place in AL up just like she has it at her current home; so it won't feel foreign or 'weird', but like a comfy nest she can sink herself right into.
So I told mom that unfortunately, the nurse from AL said she couldn't go back to her apt but had to move to a new one across the parking lot in the new and gorgeous bldg with the huge fireplace. I didn't call it Memory Care, I purposely AVOIDED that name b/c mom had Anosognosia, which is a condition that causes someone to be unaware of their mental health condition and how it affects them. So, someone who has been properly diagnosed with dementia, but has anosognosia, doesn't know or believe that they have dementia. She was happy about moving to the nice new bldg, etc. And she was fine with the whole move for a while. Until she wasn't. And kept asking me why she couldn't go back to her old apartment, over and over again, and so I'd have to tell her, over and over again, that the doctor ordered her to now live in this new bldg and not the old one.
When dementia is in the house, logic has left the scene, as you know. So whatever you tell mom, you'll have to keep repeating ad nauseum anyway. I was always The Bad Guy in my mother's mind, but someone has to have that title, why not us daughters? We are there FOR them at every turn, so we're their sounding boards and scratching posts quite often. We HAVE to be The Bad Guy b/c someone has to belly up to the bar and do the Right Thing for them. There's no other choice, so you & I get to do the dirty work.
I suggest you read this 33 page booklet which has the best information ever about managing dementia and what to expect with an elder who's been diagnosed with it.
Understanding the Dementia Experience, by Jennifer Ghent-Fuller
https://www.smashwords.com/books/view/210580
Jennifer is a nurse who worked for many years as an educator and counsellor for people with dementia and their families, as well as others in caring roles. She addresses the emotional and grief issues in the contexts in which they arise for families living with dementia. The reviews for her books are phenomenal b/c they are written in plain English & very easy to read/understand. Her writings have been VERY helpful for me.
I wish you and mom the best of luck, whether she moves into AL or Memory Care AL. Just be sure the intake nurse is aware of her REAL situation and your mother isn't able to Showtime her way thru the evaluation and wind up in AL when she belongs in MC.
Are you planning on moving her near you or near her rehab?
Just tell Mom that Assisted Living/Memory Care is part of the Rehab. Some AL/MC have the rooms furnished, others you need to bring the patient's own furnishings. It is best to try to set up the bedroom similar to how your Mom has her bedroom set up at home. Bring along her bedspread, and pictures she has on her walls.
Now if Mom cannot budget for Assisted Living/Memory Care, then she would need to apply to Medicaid [Medicaid is different from Medicare] and that could take awhile. Medicaid does not pay for Assisted Living/Memory Care in most States, thus Mom may need to reside in a Nursing Home.
My own Mom went from the hospital to rehab to a Nursing Home as she was at a point where she needed a village to take care of her.
No need to feel guilty that you are doing what is best for her.
Also, are you her PoA? If not, then you may not have a say in where she goes after rehab. If she truly has "advanced" dementia she is probably no longer able (or even willing) to assign a PoA. Guardianship would be the only other option, or allowing the county to become her guardian. Then you don't have much say in where she goes.
More info about your situation would be helpful to answer your question. Your Mom may also require a medical transport, which can be very expensive.
If she has dementia you do not need to get "buy in" from her to make the transition. If she can't safely be on her own, there's not many other options other than hiring in-home caregivers for her. Then you'd need to be managing that on a daily basis.