My mother fell and broke her ankle. She has early stage Alzheimer's, is becoming delusional and is confined to a wheelchair while the ankle heals. She is in a rehab facility for 30 days. The family is divided over whether Mom goes back home after the 30 days or after the 30 days go right to an assisted living. Is it better to return to her own home, with 24 hour care, or to transition directly into assisted living? Any advice?
There is a difference between a Retirement Community and an Assisted Living facility - which do they need.? You want to find out if there are levels of care so if more is needed over the years you won't have to move them from the facility, but maybe to a different floor because then they are still familiar with their surroundings and staff.
I started visiting various facilities and would e-mail the siblings information that they could look up on line. After visiting 9 facilities it was definitely time to make a decision for a "Memory Care" facility. I was lucky that one had an opening and the siblings agreed with my recommendations so the transition was fairly easy to move her in. Downsizing was now the concern - what to keep, what to send to siblings, what to trash, what to donate. So my spare bedroom is cluttered now, but that too will be taken care of when I rest after adjusting to this new adventure I am on with Mom.
After moving Mom I furnished it with her favorite chair and the bookshelf Dad had made that she kept family pictures on. This way there would be some familiarity in the room. Yes, she thought she was only staying for a short time, she was waiting for her sister from Denver to visit, she asked the staff to check on her airplane reservations, and she had a nice visit with friends (all deceased) when she went on her imaginary train ride.
I still take her to Doctor appointments and sometimes to lunch before returning her to her new home. We have the same conversation over and over again, but you just have to laugh it off and try to divert it to a different topic. Remember the good times by going through photo albums and telling stories. BUT don't get upset when they start to argue or contradict something that you have said. Walkout of the room and take a deep breathe, shake it off and then return with a smile on your face as if nothing had happened.
There are many agencies out there to help - check Senior Services, ElderCare, or whatever is available in your community. Join a n Alzheimer's support group or attend a Caregiver's workshop Put on a Happy Face and remember the good times.
Beware! Beware! Assisted living in home, would have solved everything and mom would have had her 6000 a month pension and her homes before she was robbed because I put her in assisted living temporarily. It has ruined mine and my mother's lives for the the rest of our lives. We are devastated. We had dreamt of going home to Clambeach, California for over 20 years and bitter, jealous, covetous, envious, conniving, cunning evil thieving children who she had helped all of their lives, dragged her into court on her 88th birthday, blocked her from going back to her own home, so they could keep it rent free, on the grounds that I was exploiting her money which the courts never proved not a one of their false allegations. The judge purposely dragged out what was originally an unlawfully scheduled hearing by my evil sister, for 8 months, hoping mom would go senile and every month put her through a rigorous 2 hour competency test with 2 separate neurologists and 2 separate psychologists and 2 separate primary doctors, also a head nurse a vital wellness and they all confirmed she is competent. My sister should have been made to pay for her lies, she lied through her teeth under oath, absurd lies: "he dog-naps my mother's dog and extorts money from her, withholds my mother's prescriptions from her, black mails her, bribes her, tortures her dog in front of her to manipulate her. Funny, mom said i'm the only person in the world she trusts 100%, the dog worships me, scott would never hurt me, i want those daughters disowned and the judge to kick my grandson out of my home. that was the last thing she said in court. None of the 3 have ever called her since, except the grandson (37, never had a job, illiterate, has 3 kids from 3 women and never has given a penny to any of them in the way of child support or for the unmarried women, in 11 years!) he's still living in the house rent free, growing pot 8 months later! The daughter stole 150,000 in cash from her mother, ran up 70,000 in credit cards as did her son, the same amount, before they hired lawyers and used the money against their matriarch to get rid of me. it worked but it backfired on them, they get no more. They stole everything they could and lied in court to steal it, and the judge stole the rest. A house of justice was merely a house of commerce. Beware!
Also, contact Adult Protective Services thru DSS in your area. They are bound by law to intercede and help. In my case, the case worker was wonderful.
I am sharing a blog I wrote - as I was asked by my mother's doctor if mom could come live with us? She could no longer live alone either. I did know, that if I took mom into our home it would not only affect her but it would not be fair to MY family either. I was already Mom's caregiver and every extra minute I had available was spent taking care of her and her business.
Please read my blog that I posted on my internet site. I post blogs that relate to my past experiences in hopes of helping other caregivers. I feel for you - and understand exactly how you feel. I hope this helps. If you would like a d/load of my book - please let me know....it will help you - your feelings, frustration, rage, and whirlwind of emotions. They are real, I have been there. I am a survivor.
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I wish I had done that with my mother after she broke her femur. She was in rehab for eight weeks, and then we moved her to assisted living, which she ended up hating. It was my brother's idea to move her to assisted living. He lives 1500 miles away, so it was easy for him to see that as an option. Since I live close by, all the issues concerning moving and care fell on me. My dad was still living in their apartment, and he missed her very much. We ended up moving her back, which was an additional expense. The bottom line now is she is very, very resistent to trying assisted living again, even though she really needs it.