I am in the city of Portland Oregon. Need to know how to connect to services that can assist me in finding the top Memory Care facilities in the SE or NE part of Portland, OR. Money is not an issue... we need to know the vert top best facilities in order to start tours. I hav heard that ther may be a 2 yr. wait list. Regards from Jill Brady
You could ask your loved one's Dr.'s office what they think is the top NH in the area.
If you go to church make an appointment with the pastor/priest and ask him. Part of his ministry is reaching out to those in NH's. He would know of some very nice places.
Put the answer out to friends and family and have them help gather information. See what comes back. If you're on Facebook you could pose the question on Facebook as well.
Try a narrow search on Google. Start with the most expensive NH and work your way down. Google "most expensive nursing home in (zip code)".
I have a patient at the best nursing home ("skilled medical facility") I've ever seen. It's very expensive and offers independent living and assisted living as well as the nursing home and a memory care unit. It's beautifully decorated, no odor, offers many recreational activities and boasts a full rehab wing. However, it is still a nursing home that is short on staff with their residents being just one among many in an institutional style living arrangement.
As to a great memory care facility. I think the best recommendation you can get on a facility comes from someone who has family or a good friend placed in one for the same purpose. That's how I chose mom's for rehab. Shirt-tail family's 102-year-old aunt was on Lexington Schaumburg's memory care floor; she'd been there for 5 years -- on Medicaid. Her family is soooo pleased with the care she gets, even though she's on the taxpayer's cheap dime. ;) I placed mom there, and I sure wasn't disappointed.
Next, I'd check this site: http://www.medicare.gov/nursinghomecompare/search.html
Medicare rates nursing homes based on Overall Rating, Cleanliness, Staffing and Quality Measures. Few are perfect, but the marginal ones stick out like sore thumbs. Can save you a great deal of time.
Since I was thinking of placing mom on this particular home's memory care floor, I took a complete tour (beyond the rehab floor she stayed in for almost 3 months). Here are the things that were important to me:
The had awesome staffing stats. If I remember correctly, it was one nurse/nurse's aid for every three patients (on the memory floor, the only one I cared about).
By state law, they were required to have eight different group activities for people every day. Wow! Every single patient was dressed in street clothes every single day before breakfast. Staff noted what they were wearing on a Morning Form so that they could be easily found if they wandered about the floor...which some of them did...into other people's rooms and into their beds! They did an hourly check on every patient's location. One staff member being responsible for three patients.
The elevator from its third-floor location had a password protected up/down button. Every patient wore a signal bracelet. If a visitor (as an example) accidentally let a patient ride along (they can be quite nonchalant and believable sometimes), the bracelet sounded an alarm. Elopement Risks (as they called them) couldn't get off the floor unescorted.
While I was there, there was a lady sitting at a table near the nurses' station. She was folding laundry. The Director told me that was her daily job. She would spend an hour folding a few piles of clothes that staff kept there just for that purpose. That was her bliss.
The rooms were lovely, shared or private. Beautiful gardens and private patios in the middle of downtown. Each different floor (rehab/nursing/memory) had at least one entertainment program once a week to which all memory care residents were escorted as appropriate. The food was pretty darned good and offered choice at every meal. I won't go on-and-on, but those are some of the things I was so impressed with that I wouldn't have hesitated to place mom there. Cost $8,200 a month with a few extra charges.
Here's a link on how to evaluate memory care units. I hope you find it helpful. It's not lost on me that one of the things they say is that every patient should have a neurological evaluation. So much for Maggie. ;)
http://www.elderbranch.com/blog/selecting-a-memory-care-facility/