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!!
Call Social Services and make them aware of the circumstances.
Tell then about the notice and lack of places with beds.
I have to say, getting an attorney “pro Bono,” isn’t as easy as it sounds.
What a dilemma.
My heart goes out to you.
Most Assisted Living places do not accept Medicaid as payment; the ones that do are the exception.
But this should be your FIRST priority - getting her qualified for Medicaid - so that when a Nursing Home bed becomes available, she is ready for it.
She had to move and something that really helped her was the MD who prescribed remeron. After that she was a good sleeper and less anxious. Caution that the dose needed to be reduced several times over several years because it was too strong as she got older.
Best of luck
First recommendation:
1) GOOD checkup with PCP
This should include complete bloodwork AND a urine culture (not just the dip stick test.)
2) Consider other medications to manage her behavior.
It is rather disconcerting that a search on Seraquil shows it is often used for dementia, yet WebMD lists it as something that should be avoided if an elderly person has dementia
Source:
https://www.webmd.com/drugs/2/drug-4718/seroquel-oral/details/list-contraindications
I have no experience with it or aricept (couldn't find a whole lot quickly regarding aricept and dementia.) I will say that sure, for some people these meds might help, but for others they don't. If she's having issues every night, then it doesn't sound like these are helping her very much. WE should not be dictating what you should try - that should be the doctor who checks her out. It's fine to say what worked for your LO, but we are NOT doctors and should not be saying DO these things! There are different causes of dementia and not all respond to the same treatments.
The only real sun-downing my mother had was due to a UTI. Others can experience this due to other infections (hence the need for complete bloodwork too.) She would be fine in the morning, like it never happened. She would be fine all during the day, until late afternoon, early evening, then all hell broke loose. She would insist she had guests coming and HAD to get out and go home, she would set off every door alarm trying to get out.
This was a woman who was mild-mannered in MC for 4 years and was well liked by all the staff. Not a problem or trouble maker. She had to take Lorazepam during the UTI treatment, which did NOT dope her up, did NOT cause any falls and kept her calm. Oddly online also shows this as something not to take with dementia, but as noted, it works for some. For her it worked 1st time, every time and didn't need to be weaned off it. I still suggest you take her in for a REALLY good checkup and ask for doctor testing/recommendations.
UTIs and infections can do strange things to elders, esp those with dementia. Mom's second UTI resulted in night time bed wetting, aka soaking everything! This despite toileting, max briefs AND a max pad inserted in the briefs.
If the current medications are not doing the job, they need to be reviewed, removed, adjusted or replaced with something that works. Given that she's had issues for a while, it may have nothing to do with any kind of infection, which is why it is important to get that checkup.
I will agree with others, this sounds like AL, not MC and she likely should have been moved to MC (or care home) before she had to move so many times. Each move will take a toll. While there are *some* MC places that accept Medicaid, they are few and far between. By all means get the Medicaid paperwork going, as that takes time, appeal the eviction to buy more time, get her to the doc for a good checkup and make sure the places you are considering accept Medicaid.
(All too often people suggest NH - in most cases this would require a NEED for NH, which it doesn't sound like is the case here.)