Mom will be 93 this month and is close to late stage dementia. She went to the hospital last week with dehydration issues and atrial fibrillation. At some point before her hospitalization she apparently suffered an "event" and may have even had a small one after she came to stay with me. It's now to the point where I can't care for her because she can't walk and I can't lift her. Some have suggested hospice either at the location or at home or getting her a full-time aide. I know what I would want if I were in my mother's situation, but I'm not sure what she would want and what would be best for her. Even if all of her physical and medical issues would miraculously disappear, she still isn't going to improve mentally. For me it's all about quality of life, but I know it's not the same for everyone. Anyone been through this situation and what were your experiences? I'm the only caregiver and Mom has no directives or proxies and I don't have POA.
If you do hospice in your home the hospice company will supply your mom with a hospital bed that has a special mattress and controls for her head, feet, and middle, and the height of the bed. The aides will be able to care for your mom from this bed using the controls. Hospice will also supply your mom with anything else she may need such as medication, adult diapers, skin protector, and really anything else you can think of. They provide bathing (in bed), spiritual support for your mom and your family, music therapy and all kinds of other little extras.
Another option is hospice in a long term care facility. You'd have to speak to a social worker at a facility regarding payment. Different types of facilities can do things a little differently.
Then there are hospice facilities. I only do in-home hospice so I don't know much about hospice facilities, what they charge, etc.
So mom would go from hospital to hospice in a facility.
My mom was on hospice for 18 months, she was in a NH on Medicaid for about 2 years and then fell (pulling her wheelchair no less), shattered a hip & became bedfast. X-rays done at NH via portable unit and NH medical director suggested hospice rather than surgery. I agreed. Hospice was paid by Medicare (about $ 4500 a mo). BUT the room & board aspect of the NH still paid by Medicaid. R&B at a facility isn't covered by Medicare long-term. I will say for my mom's NH, their regular staff and hospice staff really worked well together. It's like hospice provides extra hands to get things done and extra folks for you to lean on if need be.
My MIL too was on hospice but her situation was different. She was in a NH & "medicaid pending", became very ill & hospitalized. Severe septic and after stabilizing from shock at hospital transferred to a hospice only facility. Free-standing hospice & not a NH. Since she was hospitalized the transfer to hospice was covered by Medicare under a extended-hospitalization benefit as she kinda needed an ICU level care but had the services done at hospice. It's similar to the Medicare rehab benefit that pays for the first 21 days 100%. She was super septic and died within 3 weeks. All covered by Medicare. If she had lived longer then either it would have needed Medicaid or private pay . My aunt had a similar free-standing hospice post hospitalization situation at a VITAS unit.
Medicare may pay for a short window if the ICD-10 codes allow for the services at hospice unit.
For both MIL & my auntie the free-standing hospice were both part of a big chain (VITAS, Compassus). Both had been a hospital that converted to hospice facility with sophisticated equipment. If you speak with the bigger hospice groups, they will have someone who can walk you through the ?'s as to whether your mom would be the type of patient to go to a free-standing hospice and how payment gets structured. I will say for both my MIL & Auntie's situation, the type of resident were either very very ill (sepsis is pretty serious, like most elderly don't recover) or were end stage cancer. All seemed to be on some type of black-box drugs that need strict oversight. Most were younger & just a very few elderly. My point is that being eligible for hospice may not mean also being eligible for hospice at a free-standing hospice facility. Hospice can happen at home, at a NH or a hospice facility. Nursing staff were superb. All the hospice staff I've dealt with all really have known their stuff.
Really speak with social services at the hospital first and then hospice. There could be several hospice providers to choose from. As it's a Medicare benefit, it's in theory self-directed, so you select the provider.
Good luck & let us know how things work out for mom.
Once she entered Hospice, everything is done though Medicare. her supplemental insurance is no longer in the picture.
On Maryland Medicare if Mom went into the Hospice facility EVERYTHING is covered 100%.
Instead, I honored Mom's wish to bring her home. Hospice has provided a hospital bed and all of the supplied I would possibly need (I provide bedding) They send nurses, they bather her twice a week, they offer social workers, grief counseling etc.
The only thing they do not provide is actual caregivers. Mom has to self pay for caregivers. Through an agency, 24/7 care will run $14,400/month. I have opted to stay with our current helpers for 52 hours a week and do everything else myself for about $6-7K a month.
I am about two weeks in and am considering reneging on my promise to her to let her die at home because, frankly, it is really, really hard to take care of a bedridden patient alone.
Mom has a catheter but I keep finding her in a lake that I can only assume is coming from her bowels. She has been vomiting once to twice a day and that requires a bedding change and a clean-up.
Lesson learned - Dying at home is very expensive and trying to care for someone who is completely bedridden is really hard.
She may or may not be eligible for hospice. Being bed-bound and with advanced dementia in of itself is not usually enough for doctors to say the person is likely to die within 6 months. But if her doctor knows her and her health situation, he should be able to tell you whether she would be eligible for hospice services.
In general, it sounds like you think she may have reached a point at which repeated hospitalizations are not really meeting her needs. So even if she's not eligible for hospice, it would be a good idea to discuss your concerns with the doctor and possibly also a social worker. There are "pre-hospice" and other forms of outpatient palliative care programs that are sometimes available.
Good luck!
Once issue I have is that they only provide Ativan for agitation and my mom has always used Seroquel. We still have some so that is what I use. My son in law, a doctor, says Ativan is a nasty med and he would never use it with anyone over 70 especially with Alzheimer's.
They do not provide caregivers, at least in my state. They do allow for respite care, but you have to agree to 5 day minimum and the only do it in their facility. My son is graduating from the University next week. It is three hours away and I are going for 2 days (my husband kids and grandkids will stay three days). I am paying out of pocket to have caregivers come to my house. Mom would not do well in a facility.
Be sure to ask all the questions you can about what services are offered. Good luck!