My mother is 98 and has been in a nursing home near me for 8 months. There are several nursing homes in my area. My sister and I placed her at this one because it seems to be the consensus around here that this is the best one, although it is not fancy at all and is an older building. However, I have had many friends place their parents there, and they have had little if any complaints. A lot of the staff have been there 10+ years and seem to be very patient and caring. The administrator has lived in the area her whole life and has been working there at least 20 years.
Mother has had incontinence problems for at least 5 years now and has been wearing adult pull-ups on a regular basis. For a while she was able to handle toileting by herself for the most part, sometimes with assistance from the aides at the assisted living facility where she previously resided. After a bout with pneumonia and being hospitalized for a week, she was not able to walk and we placed her in the nursing home. She does have a private room with her own bathroom. She is not happy about not being able to have the door closed, but I understand this is a policy meant to insure her safety.
She has fallen a few times since being at the nursing home because she tries to get in/out of bed or into the bathroom and onto the toilet by herself. So far she has not hurt herself. She has been told to use her call button to summon assistance, but yesterday she tried to get into the bathroom by herself without calling anyone and she fell trying to transfer to the toilet. My sister thinks the reason she didn't call for help is that when she does do that it takes too long for the aid to come. I go there every day and spend a couple of hours, and when I'm there I have noticed that it may be as long as 15 minutes to get help. My sister thinks this is way too long. Since I am there every day I can observe what usually goes on, and I don't see anyone slacking off. They are always busy doing something. Needless to say, the other residents there are quite mobility challenged and need assistance also.
Should we be pressing the administrator to get someone to my mother's room more quickly? This is our first/only experience with a nursing home, and we're not sure exactly what we should be expecting.
my Mother is now chair bound and is in diapers. My Dad is able to go himself. It must be hard for your Mom to be dependent like that. My Mother is beside herself
It’s really frustrating for the residents. It’s equally frustrating for the aides. All I can say is that it’s very common. That is why they live in diapers.
The diapers get changed when the aides reach the room. There is no way to predict when that will be. That is what I observed. It’s hard. I’m sorry your mom has to wait. It is hard to see that they don’t receive care at a quicker time than they do. It really doesn’t matter how many times that call button is pushed. My mom pushed it repeatedly.
My husband was finally getting better and having to call to have a brief changed rather than getting to the toilet. When I got him home under my care giving, I found we were "potty training" again and it took us about 6 weeks to train his urination and bowels. I'm not at all sure what the answer is. Sometimes all the lights were blinking in a hall and indicating that they had been waiting. It's the design of the system, and those that didn't have loved ones assisting were destined to wait and loose dignity. There is humiliation in having to have someone to clean up after an accident or instruction to "use your brief".
Since you are happy with the nursing home in other areas, I think this is one where you let it go. Perhaps your sister would like to hire a private sitter who can help your mother get to the bathroom during the day. Your mother and sister are being unreasonable if they think that she should be able to make it in time with help that has to be summoned from far away when mom could not make it when she could walk.
When we would find one where the halls were empty, we turned around and left. Your request for a few minutes for then to respond is very reasonable.. but like anything else, in most cases $$$$ drive the business, regardless of what you may be paying. Not trying to be negative, it’s just something I’ve noticed and it really is sad. Best wishes...
If your mother knows that she wants to use the bathroom, it is totally unacceptable to leave her waiting because after all she can wet her pants in comfort. So diaper or no diaper, is she in fact incontinent? Is she aware of when she needs to "go"?
When my mother had a stroke and was in rehab she had the same situation with the bathroom. It's stressful because they frequently have urgency and are told they have to wait which panics them and then they just try to do it on their own - and then fall. It's just a recipe for disaster. But the reality is there's no facility that has enough staff that someone can come running every time. Maybe try some incontinence protection "in case" they don't get there in time to alleviate her stress. I like the idea of a toileting schedule as well but it may not help if there's still an urgency issue.
As far as the nursing home, are you happy otherwise? If that's your only complaint I'd say you're in a good place. If it's one of many issues, then you need to talk to them. I am also at my mom's facility every day and the workers are definitely like family to me. It's not perfect but I am happy with her care and when issues come up I just talk to them. Sometimes they will explain why they do things a certain way (and it will make sense) or have suggestions of their own which are often very helpful.
Best of luck
One thing you might try is to set an alarm for her about every hr or two (depending on how often she usually goes) and tell her to press the call button when it goes off even if she doesn't need to go yet. By the time they get there and move her to toilet, she should be able to empty something from her bladder.
But I agree that anyone who needs to wait for assistance should be using some type of incontinence product "just in case".
when I am here, I do her care. She says the aides on the floor are too rough. It’s not that they are rough. She likes to take her time and they need to stay on schedule.
Don’t be afraid to speak up when you see something that needs to be addressed. Just today at lunch I took pictures of the sparse, stale sandwiches they received for lunch and I went right to the director. I am starting a committee at her suggestion to make sure the food is improved. They welcome any thing you can do to help them improve. If they don’t, contact your local senior center social worker.
If we don’t speak up for our parents and all the residents who’s families
can’t or won’t , they will continue to get substandard care. I know my mother always made sure I was well cared for and now it’s my turn to give back to her.
Its tough when the resident is semi-mobile or thinks they are. Or can’t remember to press the call button. Or can’t find the call button. Mom was blind in one eye and eventually both, so she was given a really big round call button. It was flat and probably 4” in diameter. It was grey (what moron thought grey was a good idea?) so I put green duck tape all over it so she could find it, but she still would forget to use it. At Moms NH they could not use the motion detector bed pads. (They were ok in rehab but not the LTC for some unknown reason.) So when she was in bed we would tuck this big green call button by her legs so it would send the signal if she tried to get up. Not ideal but better than nothing. Perhaps you could investigate a different button if that would be more obvious for her.
Getting your Mom on a toileting schedule may help. That way the call button is just a secondary tool. She may already be on a schedule that’s just not obvious so you need to find that out too.
When I was there (daily) if she had to wait much more than 10 minutes I’d be in search of an aid, especially if she said it was for #2. And no, there were no slackers, just incredibly busy and understaffed. I tried to help them as much as I could.
It's a tricky issue; but there is another point you raise that I think is important.
Your sister believes that your mother didn't press her call button because your mother didn't expect anyone to answer promptly. That's possible, of course; but I'd be suspicious that your mother didn't press her call button because it didn't even cross her mind to do so; and if that comes into it then no matter how many times your mother is reminded to ask for help, and no matter how quickly the aides would respond if called, your mother is going to be off on her travels to the bathroom before anyone can get to her. Watch out!
The solution to this problem is pressure pads under your mother's mattress and armchair cushion that will alert staff when she gets up. Because of - sigh - "deprivation of liberty safeguards" these alarms are sometimes controversial: check what the nursing home's policy is.
The best way to deal with this might be for your mom to be on a toileting schedule, i.e., taken to the toilet every 2 hours.
15 minutes is too long to wait, but at certain times, say mealtimes or during shift changes, it might be difficult for staff to respond more quickly.
It took a lot of meetings and a lot of our attempts to “fumigate/disinfect” the room before we could walk down the hall without a gas mask.
Unfortunately that was not soon enough to save the chair we bought to help MIL stand ( not that she used the function).
15 minutes would be the very outside of acceptable time for answering a call button.
I would also ask straight out what the company policy is about the time allowed to answer, they all have some criteria for this.
It is always okay to ask questions and it is always okay to ask how things can be improved when they are causing potential injury. They don't want a fall with injury because they take to long to answer requests for help, those are the things that cause lawsuits and the government getting involved.
Let us know how it gets resolved.
Always be kind and understanding when speaking with the care providers, if it needs to escalate to get results use the proper channels, in writing and copy the entire facility hierarchy and then you go to the ombudsman and the state board and on up. The idea is that you are part of the team that provides care for mom and we all want to provide the best care possible.