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I’m in OK. My mom, also in OK, had a bad fall recently. She’s recovered a little but needs help in all daily basic activities including getting out of bed, and even being able to hold her own weight. The doctor has advised in-house physical therapy so she shouldn’t have any other falls. It’ll be worst possible thing for her. What are your experiences w/ daily costs of in-house rehab centers, she has BCBS (PPO).

Rehab should, for the most part, be ordered and covered by medicare, medicaid or your supplemental.
The truth is the seniors fall. They WILL fall not matter how good, how expensive the therapy. This is a matter of the aging brain.
Falls often harbor in the beginning of the end. They certainly did for my mother.
As an 81 year old who daily does fall prevention exercises to train the brain I can tell you that there's only so much training one can do for the aging brain. We now ride transit whether weighing the most we ever did or no, as feathers in the wind.
We will fall. We ill eventually be injured by these falls. We will eventually die. Our brains can no longer sustain us.
I am 81 and a retired RN. I tell you the truth.
So don't spend a lot of extra's thinking you can reverse time and the aging process.
Make it as safe as you are able.
Understand that FALLS ARE GOING TO HAPPEN, and keep your loved one safe as you are able. I wish you the very best of luck.
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Reply to AlvaDeer
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What do you mean by "in house PT".?
Do you mean inpatient PT in a rehab center, or PT at home?

Why would it be "the worst possible thing"?
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Reply to BarbBrooklyn
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Tinga613 Jun 22, 2024
Losing her will be the ‘worst …thing’ if she falls again. It’s hard for me to even type that.
life does seem short now, it goes by so quickly,
(PT at home is what I meant, it’s a whole new vocabulary)
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Look on the back of her insurance card and call the number listed for help in determining what her insurance covers.
In home PT/OT was very good for my LOs. One had therapy in the rehab outpatient facility. I have had rehab for my back in a rehab outpatient. It was covered. But we didn’t have your moms insurance so best to check. There are probably 100s of different plans across the country once you deviate away from original Medicare with a supplement.
Therapy really helped.
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Reply to 97yroldmom
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Tinga613 Jun 22, 2024
Thank you. Now that’s she’s back home, I’ll explore this more. I think she’s improving with her PT but she has to be constantly reminded of her doing exercises that she’s been taught.
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I did in Home PT with my Dad 4 times a week for 6 Months , we took a Break and started up again at 2 times a week with a VNA Nurse . Also was able to get a CNA twice a week for bathing and Hygiene - this was covered by medicare . He did great and recovered from his stroke but we did adhere to a strict schedule .
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Reply to KNance72
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Tinga613 Jun 22, 2024
Thank you, yes, she’s getting that right now - Home PT. That’s why they discharged her to go home. Thankfully the hospital said Home PT will be sufficient. I’m hoping she does better. She’s learning to use walker but doesn’t like using it.
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How old is Mom, 65 and over she should have Medicare and that will pay for PT in the home. Not sure if she can go straight to Rehab. You usually need a hospital stay for that.
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Reply to JoAnn29
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Tinga613 Jun 22, 2024
Thank you, JoAnn29. We were able to bring her back home because of the PT help at home. I’m still learning all these new terms.
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Look at her insurance policy or call the number on the back of her card. Most policies will state what the co pays are per visit. If she has a MA plan, insurance will check if the PT is in network, You dont mention about a rehab center. Was she hospitalized and offered rehab upon discharge?
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Reply to MACinCT
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Tinga613 Jun 22, 2024
Thank you so much, MACinCT. She was hospitalized but recently discharged. We arranged for CNA help to help her bathe, etc. she’s doing better now.
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Thank you do much, Alvadeer. True, the brain ages… There’s so much usually out there talking about the power of the brain, etc. that I never realized until now, that there’s a limit to that. Aging is a different ball game.
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Reply to Tinga613
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This may be more trouble than it’s worth, but it might help with getting M to do her exercises. See if you can find a YouTube of exercises that are fairly similar to hers, and set up the TV to show them. There are lots and lots and lots of exercise clips, usually about 10 minutes. Your OT may even be able to suggest one. If M's watching them on TV, she is more likely to go along with them herself, like being in a class. That is my own personal experience anyway! Make it so that you just press start, and nag a bit rather than have to stay there with her all the time.
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Reply to MargaretMcKen
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Tinga613 Jun 27, 2024
Thank you MargaretMcKen. It’s hard to get her to exercise. She promises she’ll, but doesn’t. I wish I could make her do them. The help she gets/got from OT - they visited her home and teach those - she lets that fly out of her mind as soon as they leave.
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Seems like you're saying she's on Medicare with BCBS supplemental insurance. I have that too, and they seem to cover a lot of PT, but I'm in MN and do PT at the ortho facility.

Call the number on her card and ask that question to get an accurate answer.
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