The rehab facility tested her before her release and said she was just fine to return to AL, but the AL facility insisted she go into memory care. They said they had to follow state regulations. My mother does not like it there, and I don't blame her. She loves to go and do things, make new friends, play cards, bingo, dance, do crafts. She is capable of carrying on a decent conversation. True she does repeat things now and then. When I asked her why she stays in her room most of the time, she said she's afraid of the people around her. They act strange and won't talk. I made arrangements for her to have lunch with her close friend who used to be just a few doors down when she was in AL. She looks forward to those days. I asked the facility to retest her, but they said they already did. What can I do for my mom to get the care and stimulation she needs and misses?
Is she in a continuum of care facility? You should not be paying for the increased cost of care. Does this facility accept Medicaid?
Most doctors only know how to order tests and write prescriptions. There is no incentive for them to stop milking the Medicare Cash Cow. It's unethical and causes harm to their patients.
Doctors "study" nutrition for all of about 5 seconds in medical school. 99 percent of doctors have no idea what they are doing when it comes to basic biochemistry and how it impacts upon the skin, which is the largest organ of the human body! Nutrition is basic biochemistry.
You say they re-evaluated her...I would ask them for their test results. You should be given those as part of her medical record. And then ask what their scale is for an acceptable score. Find out which cognitive test they used. There are different ones. Find out which one the rehab used and also what the s ore was. Then start fresh with the ST's evaluation.
Does your mother's facility offer extra attendant or sitter care? Would it be feasible to return her to AL if she had some extra attendant hours?
Have you looked at the Rehab doctors discharge papers. General a facility goes by what the doctor says. I would take Mom to a doctor for testing and not leave it in the hands of a facility. At my brother's Assisted Living he is the most mentally aware along with about two others. All others have quite a lot of mental deficit, but are safe, don't wander, can make it to the common room for meals, don't have incontinence, and etc. so they do not need the level of care available in Assisted Living. I would meet and discuss with the facility to find out exactly what they are seeing that they think requires memory care in the case of your Mom. If you don't agree, then do consider looking for another facility if they are available in your area.
My mother faced the same thing after she was hospitalized for pneumonia last May and then went to rehab. She became wheelchair bound and her dementia did go downhill somewhat after that whole traumatic event. So the ALF refused to take her back in the regular building where she'd lived for 5 years, but agreed to take her in Memory Care. She constantly says she'd rather go back to the ALF but truthfully, she's in no shape to do that even though she IS higher functioning than some of the other residents. She constantly says she's 'afraid' of one of the men there, but she has no reason to be. He's not violent and she weighs twice what he does. She's just put it in her mind that she's 'fine' and they are all 'nuts' and 'stupid morons'. I have to let a lot of what she says go in one ear and out the other because truthfully, she DOES have dementia and she IS incontinent, etc., and she's not in much better shape than ANY of the other residents. Just marginally, and with dementia being progressive, it's a downhill slide ANYWAY, if you get my meaning. My mother loves to complain, so even if I were to move her to the Palace of Versailles, she'd find the gold to be tarnished.
At this point, I can move her out of MC myself, but I KNOW that no other ALF would accept her. If you truly feel that your mother is not MC material, then look around for another ALF you like. She'll need to be assessed, of course, before they will accept her. Again, they all have criteria and only want residents who are pretty independent and not in need of TOO much care. My mother was beginning to become burdensome before she got sick last May, and I feel like the ALF was waiting for their opportunity to move her to MC. They let her get away with needing a lot of extra care for about 10 months before the incident.
Wishing you the best of luck.
It's not enough to cash out, so I pitch in. That's not good for my bottom line, but I don't see a better alternative at this point.