Mom fell and broke her hip because of a cord left in an area she was permitted to access. Her only solace was walking and now she is confined to a wheel chair or a "comfy chair". She had to have a plate put in her hip and now she can no longer walk. She is confused and combative because she doesn't understand that she can't just get out of her chair and walk. The nursing home dumped her on the local hospital emergency room and expect them to find a psychiatric geriatric unit to help adjust her meds so she won't be so agitated. The nursing home says, they do not have the staff to watch her constantly so she doesn't get up and fall again. They put her in this situation with their negligence and now they don't want to deal with her issues. No one will take her due to her medical condition. They truly just dumped her. This is heartbreaking, she is so scared and confused. I have no idea how to help her. She is in the hospital and they are trying to find placement for her in a geriatric psych ward. I do not understand how a dementia ward in a nursing home can not deal with a dementia patient!! Would really like to hear if any one else has dealt with this issue.
If a serious problem with care of a loved one arises put it writing and document asap and send it to the facility or DON. You will find quickly what type of facility your dealing with if an effort is made to solve the problem when a serious concern is in writing.
Also, a serious well documented complaint with supporting back up documentation stands a better chance of accountability by the States Bureau of Licensure. Don't be afraid to appeal their decisions and expect to appeal. Nurses and DONS who back up lousy care or look the other way are putting their license at risk. True most facilities will rarely shut down. Although, a nursing license can be revoked, criminal liabilities do exist for neglect and abuse and lawsuits can be fought favorably with good supporting documentation.
If your mother was injured due to negligence, get a good lawyer. Now.
I went through this with my late father, who had vascular dementia. He began assaulting the other residents by yanking out their hair deliberately. So, I agreed to a "chemical restraint" of low-dose Ativan. Yes, it made him less functional - but the result was that both he and the other residents were safer.
Not all nursing homes provide the same level of care - and this is regulated by each state. A NH that is licensed as "rest home" basically only provides custodial care - feeding, bathing, light supervision, basic medical care. One needs to be in a "skilled nursing facility" to receive a higher level of care or a NH with several specialized units.
Gero-Psych patients are the most difficult to place anywhere, because they have both dementia and mental illness (e.g. bipolar, schizophrenia).
Finally, another consideration is that NHs that accept a large percentage of Medicaid-only paying patients are woefully understaffed. I think some adult children have the mistaken notion that their elderly parent is going to have some kind of one-on-one supervision 24/7 - which is not possible in a place with just one LPN for every 25 residents and a few aides. Even in one's own home, it is not possible to supervise an elderly parent at every single second of the day and accidents may happen. You might go to stick a load of laundry in the washer, turn your back for one minute, and your parent falls out of their wheelchair and breaks a hip.
However, a facility can place a client in psychiatric facility if their behavior warrants (i.e. hitting, yelling, screaming, verbally abusive (cussing), grabbing and scratching staff would all be included in behavior issues in addition to sexually inappropriate behavior.
Here is something else to consider when your mom gets settled into where she will be living. It helped my mom, and therefore me, to hire student nurses who had done their "clinicals" at the NH. I could only afford to do that a few times a week, but my mom was much calmer and happier when she had that companionship.
Best wishes to you.
I fear that any kind of NH that is willing to take on such a resident is not going to be too great (just over medicating them to oblivion) and leave them sit in front of a window somewhere scared, lonely, helpless. They will be just as understaffed and what kind of nurses, CNAs, aids want to deal with a NH full of these kind of residents as their everyday job. Very sad situation and I have no answers.
Two helpful answers posted earlier:
1. consult with hospice
2. consult with director and work with them as much as you can to get 30 days or your local hospital/doctor to find alternate NH care.
I am so sorry that your mom's end of life was so hard on both of you. I know the emotions you are feeling now are probably a mixed bag. May peace be with you.
Use your eyes, ears, nose, and good sense to evaluate what you see. It is next to impossible for a facility of any size to put on a show all the time, every day. If the residents don't look clean, the place is a mess, it's not orderly, bright, and cheerful, then those would be red flags to me.
It's not going to look like a resort full of vacationers. The people in there have serious illnesses. Some of the are going to be asleep where they sit. Some are going to be feisty and arguing like little children. Others are going to be talking to somebody invisible. Yes, some will holler and yell. Especially in a dementia unit. You will hear somebody calling out "Nurse! Nurse! Nurse!" the entire time. There is a lady on my mom's unit who does this every waking second, every day, regardless of how many nurses attend to her. It is not a sign something is desperately wrong that everybody is ignoring. It means they are not medicating her to the edge of consciousness. Imagine working there all day long.
If the place has been open a long time, that is a good thing.
It's not going to look like the marketing brochures. If it did, I'd want to know why those healthy looking people need to be in a residential long term care place.