It's getting harder to care for my husband who has dementia. Next Friday, he is scheduled to go for a physical which is required before he can go to a memory care unit. I feel guilty about making the decision to move him there, but it is a constant struggle trying to get him to take a bath, wash his hands, brush his teeth, blow his nose, dress, get up and out of bed, take his meds, etc. Lately he's been very gruff, uncooperative, sulking, non-verbal at times, and has tried to hit me and throw things at me.
But even if the doctor says that it is a good idea to get him in there, how do I explain it to my husband? Or don't I?
How do I get him there? Just take him by car, and more or less, drop him off?
I've heard that people have been told to NOT come to visit or talk with the patient for the first 3 weeks. Why? What if it is not a good fit?
Thanks for your insights.
If you have no LTC insurance, be prepared to pay $8,000 per month on your own.....if you have limited resources you better be in touch with your county Medicaid office beforehand. Some facilities are strictly private-pay, and you get kicked out when you run out of money. Others require you to "prove" assets to be self-pay for at least 2 or 3 years (at $8k per month this is quite a bit!). If you can't afford that right now, at least get someone in to your home to help you with your husband. It is not out of the question to have your husband restrained to a certain room of the house, just so you have some breathing room and time to do your own necessities (it would be cruel for you to have to be keeping an eye on him, while you are in the shower, for example, and safer for him if he is locked in his own room for 20 minutes while you can't keep an eye on him). That wouldn't be a good long-term solution but for the time being it is the best you can do. My own parent had to deal with her spouse with Alzheimer's and that was what they would do, for the time being, before they could find nursing home (and arrange the payments).
Your husband is losing his ability to reason and to function in daily activities. It might just be time for you to put him into a memory care facility where he can be safe and care for by others.
My heart goes out to you.
results. Apparently this test is so common for all the people who take care of others that it is generally not talked about. Thought a heads up might help a few folks.
They moved her to the locked unit and we did not visit for a week. They told me that most of the residents spend a lot of time the first week standing by the door waiting for an opportunity to get out the door. She did call us twice the first week to say she had been incarcerated, or was being held against her will, and then she settled in. We kept waiting for the other shoe to drop, but she was happy to be there. Unbelievable since for the past 6 months we got calls from her every few days (and middle of the night) telling us she needed a ride home, etc., and she had lived in that room for 10 years. After the first week in the memory Unit we didn’t have another eruption until Christmas.
No, do not drop him at the door. You will be the one constant he knows when he goes to his new home. We were asked to help with the move (but as antagonistic as she had become, we told the staff, “No thanks. You get to be the bad guys here.”). What we did do was choose what items she would take to the new, much smaller room with her. We picked some of her familiar things to let her know that she was safe and where she belonged.
They also have an 8x10 case outside her door for her photo, or a photo she would find familiar to help her identify her room.
All told, we waited one week to visit. Her sister called her every evening as she has one for months (following a NH stay for a fall, that mentally set her back and from which she never got better), so that was still a constant.
My friend did not visit her own Mom for a month. That was what worked for her.
So let the staff and the social worker guide you. They will say, “It’s up to you,” but tell them you need their guidance and recommendations. Once you do that they will tell you what they think. There is no “3-week” standard. Each resident is different. My MIL is nicer than she has been in a year. She has been in this unit only since right before Thanksgiving. A huge relief for us.
I spoke to staff and social workers right before Christmas asking their opinion about taking her out on Christmas morning for a very low-key visit to my son’s house. I got very worried looks, and “It’s up to you. We don’t restrict anyone.” But I told them I wanted their recommendation. They were going to have to deal with her when we returned her. Then they each said the same thing. “We don’t think she is ready yet. Best to give her more time to firmly understand this is her new home and not give her mind an opportunity to think she can live anywhere else.” That was all we needed. We visited HER on Christmas, rather than take her out.
We just place my mother in a memory care unit yesterday. While I know we did the right thing, I am still having the guilt feelings about not being able to care for her. The above posts have helped.
We took her there for lunch and did not tell her what it was. We ate lunch with her and left when she went to the restroom. We didn't take her clothes when we went for lunch and took them back later in the day without seeing her again. They want her to get settled without the agitation of seeing us. It may be days or may be weeks. They say the separation time will vary and they will evaluate and let us know when we can see her again.
Again, you need to do it as soon as possible. I have friends that had to step in when their mother tried to ignore the increasing violence of their father.
Thankfully, I haven't had to deal with the nasty attitude and violence with my husband and have kept him at home with some outside help. Everyone does what they feel is right, and moving your husband is right for you and him in this case.
I think the most important thing you can do is to find a way to not feel guilty. You are not responsible for him having this disease. You have done all you can for him. It is time to admit that and go on. Easier said than done. What helps me during such trying times, I've had dementia and deaths in my own family, is to practice gratitude. I am grateful that there are places for people with dementia to go that are specialized in their care. I am grateful that, after a little while, I'll be able to visit and still see him. I am grateful that the burden of his care is going to be lifted from me. I am grateful...... My prayer is that you feel at peace.
If you haven't already, if I were you, I would write an email to the doctor succinct Lee outlining your problems with care taking your husband and why you can no longer have him at home. Some doctors are reluctant to recognize the needs of the caregiver and the impending inability to care take. But you should not have this discussion IN FRONT of your husband.
How do you tell him? You don't. On the day of placement, you take a trip. If it is a memory care facility, they know what they're doing with. Once you get him through the door, even if they have to help you, he's in. You don't have to drop him at the door. You can certainly go in with him. You will have clothes to take (and usually they will need to be marked if you haven't done that already). And there is the issue of his medication, which I will write you in a separate post.
You may be asked not to visit for 2 or 3 weeks. This is generally to help the staff help him do what they euphemistically call "settling in". In truth, they are usually agitated from the move and when they see you, they believe you can be there to take them away. Each patient is different. When we placed my dad, we went back each day for the next 5 days but we gradually detached from him so that we watch over him but did not speak to him. We let the staff go about their work without "helping". In all fairness, they will have to "learn" your husband and the torture for you, as the onlooker, is that they won't do everything the way you do. Don't expect them to necessarily listen to your evaluation of your husband or how you think you should be cared for. You see, they think they know what they're doing. So, pick your battles carefully, and only interject when it's truly a matter of safety.
After those first few days, we did stay away for another 4 or 5 days, but then my mother couldn't stand it any longer so we went down. We had to place him at a facility nearly an hour from home, up and down a very steep pass. My mom's age was 76 & 77 while he lived there for 1-1/2 yrs, but she's visited all day long every other day, her main "job" being to feed him because he couldn't eat by himself. I was working so I generally went about once a week, either with her or by myself on an off day.
Feeling guilty about placing him would be the same as feeling guilty about him having the disease. You can't. If he has tried to hit you or throw things at you, you are already at risk and past the point of no return. I know how sad it is, but you must think of your safety right now. After he is placed, you will be in a better position to be his wife instead of his nurse, and oversee his care from a place of rationality rather than exhaustion.