I and my sister were providing in home care for our mother with dementia and disability factors. We did not want to place her into the Nursing facility but it became a necessity due to her combative nature and her disability has now confined her to a wheelchair. My question is, should I move her to another Nursing facility after she has been for over a year now in this same facility? She has finally stopped asking us to take her home. It was quite an adjustment for her and us to place her in the facility.
The thing is both I and my sister are unhappy with the treatment that she is receiving at this time in the facility she is in. Examples include but are not limited to: when she first moved in she was asked to give her consent to sign her bank account over to the facility Nursing home and change her bank over to theirs without informing us, the facility is constantly doing things that are insubordinate, they won't return my calls, and when asked for details concerning mother I usually get the run around, she fell about a week ago which has been a constant here lately and was taken to the hospital and we never received a call about it. In fact how we found out When we went to visit her and her arm was all bandaged. She has fallen before and had to have stitches on her face in several places. Now she is unable to see from her left eye. I know that the instability is part of the dementia but we want to be informed about it and answers to what had went on in the emergency room. My concern is my mother. Will the move be to much for her? I have made complaints to management but things continue to happen. Please help!
She may well decline and the decline may be permanent or she may recover a bit.
If she has dementia the facility should NEVER have asked her to sign anything as that would not be legal. She is not competent to make financial decisions. (I do hope you have POA, or someone in the family does) I would carefully go over ANY and ALL expenses that they have put through.
Getting back to the decline. She may or may not, she may or may not be upset with the move. You can never tell how someone with dementia will react in a given situation.
But when it comes to safety and well being that is more important and worth the risk of a bit of a decline.
I would get a medical transport for her, she may think that it is another trip to the hospital. How you get her belongings to the new place will be the trick.
Or if you do take her out occasionally for lunch do the same but when you bring her back it will be to her new room. That would be easier as one of you can set up the room while the other has mom in transit.
Your mom should be treated with respect and dignity. She should be given the best medical care and kept safe. Having said that, all falls aren’t preventable. As sad as it is, accidents happen. If you feel that her accidents are due to negligence, please file a report with the DON, speak to a social worker and your Ombudsman, if necessary.
Thoroughly research new facilities, if you decide to move your mom. Tour them virtually or in person if you can. Discuss all concerns.
I am not sure what is involved in moving your mom in her particular case, but I certainly understand that you and your sister would like her moved into another facility.
Wishing you and your family all the best.
Do what you have to do to ensure she's receiving quality care. Check out the Medicare website for ratings on nursing homes in your area, and look at reviews on Yelp or other sites to get an idea of how other places work. Visit in person, too.
Yes, Mom will have a period of adjustment and will likely not bounce back all the way, but she certainly isn't being cared for properly at all now so it can't be worse.
I would also file a complaint about them not notifying you of your mom's fall and trip to the hospital. That's completely inexcusable unless you aren't listed at the person to notify in the case of an emergency or don't have power of attorney for her.
Don't you have POA. As such, the NH should not be talking to Mom but to you. And that should have been established at time of admitting. They were definitely wrong in having Mom, with Dementia, sign anything and I would report this to the State once you have her placed somewhere else.
Moms NH did ask to be her payee for pension and SS once she was on Medicaid. They never asked for access to her banking accts.
If ur Mom is on Medicaid, she has a Personal Needs account she is entitled to. Also, any money left in her bank account from the spenddown. Don't let the NH tell you different. That is her money and part of her estate. Also, make Medicaid aware of the move so funds will be transferred. Maybe the new NH can help you.
By law in most states they're supposed to inform the family when there's an incident or someone goes to the hospital. Non-reputable nursing homes ask for the bank account info. Never give it.
She will adapt to it well enough.
The nursing home she's in had no right to transfer her funds into their bank account without the written consent of her POA. She had dementia and can no longer make that decision.
Do not allow the next nursing home you place her in any access to her banking information. Do not give them her social security number either. Never allow a nursing home or memory care or whatever nursing homes are called these days, access to any of this information.
Insist that they send you a written bill every month that you pay by cashier's check from the bank (that is if she's not on Medicaid yet). Also insist that if you're unable to visit weekly, that you want a wellness call from them every week to keep you informed.
In the meantime, if you're her POA, open all new bank accounts and have her funds diverted to the new ones. Stop allowing the nursing home access to this information.
I would be concern as I had a case where a wife left her spouse in a skilled facility for a few days, he felled, she was not told, she arrived to get him and only told because he was no longer the same person, meaning his "fall" was not witnessed, and no one knows about loss of consciousness or how long, she took a viable man for skilled care, brought out a man with cognitive changes that actually never got better, and she was now taking care of all of his needs.
If you fear issues, you might state you want changes or prior to pandemic, many families would hire sitters as companions to their cognitively impaired loved ones. Do not know if you both trialed these things before placing her in a home, or not.
Lowing your ability to control things in your life brings fear to many, yet it is not discussed prior to actually going through it with your loved ones. Many do not great relationships prior to these changes, so now one has in their mind the child that do not loved them controlling what many feel is nothing of what they wanted.
Look at what you have with your mother. Did you both have a great relationship with her, does she trust you, did she feel loved by you? Family continue to think it is about doing the right thing, but I would be fearful of my children if they just come in to tell me what and where I am going yet I could not recall them spending anytime with me prior to these changes.
Remember. We all need to treat our loved ones with compassion and care especially if they were there for you and did the best they could for you. If you did not this given and cannot provide, please tell your aging parents to make their plans with Geriatric Specialists, Case Managers specializing in these matters, and please see attorneys, one can do all of this planning ahead of time without emotions and possibly get a better outcome when Courts are involved and Trustee assigned.
Mowing her to another place should occur only if you have found and been given a bed for sure, you have raised every issue in writing this time with the Director of Nursing, toured the placement, know where her room would be, found out how they report falls, alert that patient is falls risk, do rounds with medical Director, who is this person by name, does he or she visit each patient or call in to allow nurse to tell them what is going on with patient? You need to know when do they call for transport to remove patient for immediate care, and who calls family? Read the Contract closely, and establish better visits "without" stating you are coming. Be very good to staff and get them to trust you, the more you are, the more people care for your loved one. Talk to mom about it all, she is there do not do things as if she is not present, everyone gives up when they no longer care. "Adult Failure to Thrive" is really a diagnosis often used with dementia patients who also have significant depression and these diseases become progressive to Terminal.
A move to a different nursing home will very likely unsettle her. It has to be done though.
The facility engages in underhanded and illegal actions in their business practices practices. They downright lie about accidents and injuries to residents, even when they're caught.
What the hell goes on with the actual patient care in such a place? What kind of corners are they cutting every day when no one is looking?
The mother will get over being unsettled by a move and will adapt. She should not be left in such a facility one second longer than she has to be.
Nursing Homes are only a last resort when someone doesn't have family able or willing to take care of them.
Do you have POA for your mom?
Did you ask the Nursing Home why they wanted your mom's Bank Information?
Have you gone over her monthly statements to see if any money has been withdrawn?
Are you on your mom's Bank Account?
If so, take most of the money out and put in another account for mom and just leave $100.
Is your mom in the Nursing Home being paid by Medicare or Medicaid?
DI'd you check with a few other Nursing Homes to see if the patient is required to give their Bank Account info to them?
You can always check with the Aging Dept with questions and I would also check to see if they've been any complaints filed on this Nursing Home.
Ask your mom how she likes it there.
Ask your mom if she would like to visit another Nursing Home.
If I had no other choice but a Nursing Home, I would choose one that would allow a Camera in her room so I can see how she is treated at least in her room.
My 97 yr old Dad is staying in his own home with 24 7 Caregivers.
I have Nest Cameras installed to be able to see all the parts of his home that he goes to.
I feel so much better being able to watch him anytime 24 7 from my laptop or cell phone.
He has Dementia and can't remember more than a few minutes.
When he's got a bruise or whatever, after their explanation, I can always back the Nest Camera Recording up fir the last 30 days and see and hear what happened.
HOWEVER….get her the hell out!! The facility is TOTALLY out of line!! Not telling you, that she had fallen & taken to the hospital?? Unacceptable!!
If her insurance allows it, move her to an AFH (Adult Family Home). Much better care (not always) so look around!
I feel for you! Best of luck!!
The rehab place was horrible and we scrambled to move her out of there. The staff was great but the facility was sold soon after she moved in and I just didn’t like how difficult it was to get in touch with the staff. We were not allowed inside so the only monitoring I could do was thru the window. I realize conditions were hard for everyone but I did not have good vibes about Mom being there.
Yes, it is difficult for a dementia patient to be moved around but the change in Mom was immediate. We were allowed to move her own furniture and things into her room and the staff arranged her transport and let us sit outside and visit for a while before she was admitted. Instead of being left in bed or a wheelchair all day the new place insisted that resident be outside their rooms and engaged as much as possible throughout the day. We were able to visit through a screen window and later inside across a table. She enjoyed the food and crafts especially.
Sadly she was exposed to Covid after Thanksgiving and succumbed to the virus. But I am glad that her last few months were happy.
The reality is that most of the care facilities are for-profit entities and for the employees it's just a job. You will have wonderful caring aids and nurses a long side ones who put in the hours and do the bare minimum.
In Ohio if a resident falls unattended they are required to be sent to the ER. Mom kept getting out of bed in the night and falling. After several trips to the ER and a couple of black eyes and stitches we finally had her bed lowered at night so if she did try to get up she would only roll out onto the floor mats by her bed. Any time she had a fall I would get a call letting me know the circumstances.
And I can’t believe ANY reputable facility would require you to give them access to her bank account. I set up an automatic withdrawal for fees but got separate bills for any other service they provided.
Before moving her, check out several places. Ask many questions and ensure that you would be allowed to visit anytime without prior notice. Hopefully now that so many are vaccinated, access should be allowed and hopefully they would allow you access at other times to "check" the place. Note whatever you can, how others are cared for, whether they are left sitting unattended, left in their rooms, check at mealtimes, use your nose to check odors, etc. The more you can check before making a decision, the better.
While she may or may not experience a decline, my bigger concern would be for her care and to reduce the falls. While falls are to be expected with many, being in a wheelchair, this would be distressing to me and bad for mom!
It is true that many NHs were understaffed before the virus, and that has continued to be an issue (even vet offices are sorely understaffed at this time!) Even finding in-home care-givers is becoming/already was an issue.
If mom's room can be set up in a similar fashion, it should reduce any confusion after a move. She's in a wheelchair, so it's not like she'd get lost on her own - they should be wheeling her to activities and meals. Staff might be new/unfamiliar, but with short term memory loss typical with dementia, she might not even know one care-giver from another anyway.
Any setback or unfamiliarity with staff would be secondary to poor care. Do your best to scope out a new place and move her!
(despite what some think/post, not all facilities are the same.)
PLEASE GET HER OUT OF THERE ASAP!
He’s now in a 3 star facility with a 5 star patient care rating and it shows. I put him in hospice since I wanted him to be comfortable instead of suffering through radiation and chemo for a large glioblastoma. He has improved and it’s been a far more pleasant experience for his 22 year old daughter to deal with. The billing office isn’t dodging me, his surroundings are much nicer and my niece can see her dad anytime. Medicare wouldn’t pay for his transport—he could barely walk at the time—but with assistance at both places she was able to move him.
While you are not directly involved in her day to day care, you are still a caregiver. Worrying about her care, wondering when the next call comes in about another problem, all takes a toll on you. Since we moved him life is better. I hope you can move her to a better place.
If she does not have Medicaid then that means she pays the bill (with family assistance as required). This is called "self pay", then the facility has NO right to her bank/checking account information. Do you or your siblings have a POA or DPOA or MPOA. I would contact a Senior Advocate Agency and get some answers in a hurry.
I would also report this facility. They are either over stepping their rights, scamming, or just did not explain your and your mothers right concerning her care. Something does not feel right in all this. Again the Senior Advocate Agency is a good starting point for answers.
Good Luck and God Bless