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I was also very opposed to nursing homes, and took my mother and father into my care. They are 89 and 93, and both have dementia, but very different types. They have been with me for over a year, and it is very taxing. Make sure you have lots of friends and relatives that will help out when you are tired and burnt out! The experience I am having is that I often need more support than I am getting.
Personalities change as the disease progresses, and you may end up caring for someone who is nothing like how your grandmother used to be. It's impossible to predict which course your grandmother's disease will take. Alzheimer's Reading Room is a great site- really informative- it's worth getting on their mailing list. Emails seem to arrive just at the right time, with advice for coping with all kinds of situations. One last thing, it's ok to change your mind!. If you take her in and it becomes too much for you, know that you gave her a good experience while she was with you, that she wouldn't have had if you had let her go straight to a nursing home.
Good luck, whatever you decide to do.
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Will you be able to provide 3 or 4 different activities every day for gram to pick from? How about special programs? Maybe a singer in, a dancer or two, an accordion player? Will you be able to greet her every morning with a smiling face and encouraging words? Will you be able to put her on a relative schedule of three nourishing meals a day, maybe an ice cream dessert or apple pie slice in the afternoon? Change her Depends, wash her bedding every day, protect her from herself...

I don't know what's going on in your life that you would think you can give your two babies a happy and semi rested mom seven days a week AND feed, dress, bath, drive to doctor appointments, with her, AND! Be a supportive and loving spouse . . . But I think you need to look at your motives and rethink your strategy.

Your response to FreqFlyer is telling. I honestly can't think of much that would be less fair to your two babies...
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Thank you! Also, my sister has worked in a nursing home and specifically memory care. She did not have great things to say, and said she would never recommend that for anyone! :( I will definitely take a look at the link. Thank you!
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Amk, arm yourself with all the knowledge you can find about dementia. Check out this link https://www.agingcare.com/Alzheimers-Dementia and scroll down to the articles. Even though some article are titled Alzheimer's, those with dementia can also have the same issues. Do you know what stage of dementia your grandmother has?

One very important thing when bringing someone with dementia [depending on the stage] into a home that has children, is that the person might become very jealous of the children. And a 2.5 year old and 10 month old cannot defend themselves. Plus there are the issues of bad behavior by the elder which you might find your children copying.

And I worry about the dogs. Animals can sense when something isn't right, and the dogs might see grandma as a threat to the children.

After you read the link I provided above, you will understand more why your family is pro-nursing home. But I do appreciate the thought that you wish to take care of your grandmother at home. Maybe you can for awhile.
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