Mom is 92, a peach during the day but at night but has severe sundowning and walks the halls, enters others rooms, bangs on doors, writes on walls, wanders outside and occasionally is naked. Belligerent. She has no recollection. Facility is not equipped to manage her. A friend mentioned music which I will try, but the fact is I have to move her for the 5th time in four years to a memory care and there are only two in the area. Both are full and I am at my wits end. The facility is setting up a NPI interview which may help fast track her into one of the facilities if a bed becomes available. I am in the process of getting mom enrolled in Medicaid (she has no money). The facility has sent me a 30 day notification of removal. Any words of wisdom would be appreciated!!
That can do a number, no pun, on people who don't have mental issues, it can be worse for those that do.
On the 30 day notice, there should be a CC at the bottom of the letter. Usually it gets CC to a probono legal aid, you might want to contact them as to any suggestions for placement.
If realistically you cannot find a new place and mom has worn out her welcome in any other facilities, AND if you do NOT come to get her, the MC will likely contact APS… then APS will seek an emergency ward of the state action for mom. So mom becomes under the purview of the guardian (judge usually assigns an atty or other professional guardian vetted by the state). Sometimes this can be best as they can find a spot for her and take care of filing Medicaid. If this happens, it does not have to be contentious between you and the court appointed guardian. Perhaps view APS and the guardian as being able to do what you cannot as they have all the resources of the State to use. If there has been no financial misappropriation that would be an issue for mom’s Medicaid eligibility, having her become a ward of the state may be something for you to think about.
Her going naked probably is the tipping point for the MC. Has there been any discussion on changing her wardrobe? There are clothing lines that are “adaptive clothing”, basically clothing they can’t get out of them…. They get called “anti-strip” or “stay dressed”. Silverts Clothing & Buck & Buck carry them.
Ward of the state.....yikes, don't know if I can do that. But when the time comes you do what you gotta do. I'm meeting with the facility director tomorrow and float that by him.
Thanks for the clothing info.
She was on hospice at the time. Hospice recommended a much smaller care home that take those that have been kicked out. That care home worked better for mom and would have been better for her from the beginning. And it was cheaper than the large corporation memory care.
Best wishes to you, this is hard.
Our AL has a geriatric behaviorist on staff. What a Godsend! If yours does, use that person. If not ask them whom they recommend.
Have you talked to the doctor who manages her medications about her behavioral challenges and the fact that she's may need to move? I think a change or adustments in meds is in order.
Mom probably should have been in Memory Care since the first or second time you moved her.
I know many people do not want to move a loved one into MC "sooner than they need to be" BUT the sooner a transition is made to MC the easier it is for someone with dementia to adjust to a new routine, new surroundings.
Medication can help with the anxiety, sleeping.
Not to rush or push anything but if mom has any condition that might make her eligible for Hospice a Hospice placement would also "fast track" her into a facility. Not to push it but typically with a hospice recommendation a facility would accept a person with an anticipated shorter residential expectancy. (did that make sense?)
This might take a week, not sure. You can ask if she can be evaluated in a hospital setting for 2 weeks?
Back when my mom was alive, she was on a 4 year waiting list to get into a Medicare bed at a long term care facility.
The only way to bypass that long wait was to have just been released from a hospital to do 30 days at a nursing home, and then they’d downgrade her to an assisted living. She didn’t have this happen, but I know it was/possibly is still a thing. I don’t know if it still works that way (she passed in 2013)...
...but if it does still work that way, it might buy you another month? I think her program was called the StarPlus program that paid for her long term care? Call to find out if they offer this and if the Hospital Stay/30 day Nursing Home/Downgraded to an assisted living with a Memory Care Wing is an option.
God bless you and your mother, xo
Would they be able to lock her door in the evenings to keep her from going on other rooms?
If she can walk well she should have a daily course of walking. Eat no sweets and a B supplement. I recommend Puritan Pride They make their own and are pure. Let everyone know so others can benefit
big pharma wouldn’t want this known since they love MONEY!!
Cancer also can be. cured by an alkaline diet. Acid feeds cancer
Diet is important
It is caused by brain cells dying and brain chemistry changing.
What are you talking about ?
Be careful - VERY CAREFUL - making blanket statements.
You mean Medicaid, no? Medicare doesn't cover LTC and only covers rehab 100% for 100 days, maximum (can be less if no progress is made.)
It can have a serious interaction with alcohol, and certain medications, including MAO inhibitors. Although it is OTC, a doctor should be asked if she can take it, or if it might have interactions with any of the meds she is already taking.
She is on zoloft for depression, remeron to help her sleep at night, risperadone (anti-psychotic med), a very low dose of liquid methadone for her pain ( from a palliative doctor).
The medication was prescribed by an amazing group of doctors over an 18 month period of time.
There is now a contentment that exists for Mom, caregivers.
it takes a lot of work to oversee that the input is consistent but it has paid off.
I’m exhausted but it’s the right path.
FYI, we were advised to NOT do CBD. It can make psychosis worse.
My heart goes out to you.
Whatever you do ... do not take her home with you!
Keep looking and know that the deadline for her removal is flexible, especially if you're truly looking for a place for her.
I don't really understand facility trying to help you fast track her into one of the local facilities while, at the same time, serving documents to boot her out. Appeal. And submit copy of the appeal to your Ombudsman's office, too.
You might also ask the facility doctor to see about meds that might quiet her activities at night. It's very possible there is something for sleeping that might make things better and stay where she is.
How is current facility being paid for if she has no money and has no Medicaid. Did facility keep her and her midnight raids as long as she could pay and THEN decide it was time to move on when they knew the funds were depleted? If so, mention that in your appeal - she has been doing this for XX number of months and acceptable to facility as a self pay patient. Ironic it is no longer acceptable at the same time money ran out and would need Medicaid.
Too much glucose floating around from juice and sugary oatmeal and icecream etc will also create cellular inflammation. We are only suppose to have 1 tsp of glucose or glycogen in our blood at any given time is what i picked up somewhere. More than that and we are in an inflammatory state.
If you can get her labs and take them to an online functional medicine doctor or speak or plead sincerely with her physician to look at her labs and rule out that her body is not going into a self repair activation mode to manage this loss of homeostasis, ,,,hopefully the dr specializes in geriatrics or dementia or Alzheimer's, that whole cognition umbrella. THose dr of many other types of health practitioners or even other people on this very site, know how to turn this around to make it more manageable. Otherwise i would not have been able to have my parents live with me. My mom would also come around naked, open the doors, yell, have agitation and be up so late. Once i got the windows open, got her out into sunshine for an hour a day... her D levels up and eating actual COD LIVERS, bumping up magnesium... (depends what kind because it can create diarrhea by moving the intestinal contents too fast. But the sun downing issues mostly resolved with getting the person stimulated enough during the day with a lot of activity and outdoor air. Except in her last few months, she began to get swallow issues WHen my dad behaves with more anxiety, he usually ends up going to have a bowel movement and his anxiety miraculously stops. This just happened last week. I am beginning to notice this pattern. I myself begin to get frustrated when i eat a whole bag of popcorn and feel just too packed in my intestines. With elders, their neuropathways begin in the intestines and if they are blocked or there is not enough of a diversity of bacteria to provide communication and digestion and get it into the villi and absorbed, the brain goes wacko. You can read up on that .... Look up "tight junctions" nutrient absorption, cognition, constipation, neurotransmitters, microbiome, magnesium, electrolytes, behavior, circadian rhythm, "sun downing" schedule, regularity, hydration, improvement, strains, reverse symptoms, ph, mood, dementia etc etc. You will get a lot of answers.
First, get an appt. for her to see her PCP to check for an UTI. That's always a good idea. It seems these are quite common and often go undiagnosed, which is so sad for the aging person and family that wants what's best for them.
Next, while you wait for the appt., contact an eldercare attny or legal service organization that does pro-bono work. This should be a absolute in order to make sure you know her rights, and yours as her caregiver. This "you have to move her" seems quite drastic esp. since they seem to enjoy her, and many facilities want to keep residents. Please make sure you check references and confirm their credentials prior to providing a lot of personal info, and esp. before you pay them anything, though.
Then, reach out to hospice in your area. My experience w/ hospice is that they can be a wealth of information when it comes to resources and support. Again, do your research to find a reputable one.
If your mom was part of a religious congregation, they may have some suggestions for sitters. Shoot, you could even see if there is a senior center in the area. They may have volunteers or "low cost" options for a caregiver to be with her at her current facility.
Good luck. Keep loving her and doing the best that you are doing.