Dad comes home on Hospice today. We had made arrangements for both parents to go to assisted living next week and now Mom who has Alzheimer’s, will lose him before the move. Friends in the medical field tell me she should still go and soon. There isn’t room yet in the Memory Care Unit and she’d have to be in a room alone until there is. They say she would leave the door open and can come and go from her room. Not sure if it’s better to have her in her home, lonely with a caregiver or go where there are more people around but in a new environment?
If you take her to her previous home, or your home, or any other home, then there will be the jolt of leaving there, and the fewer jolts and changes, the less unsettling the transition.
Be sure the staff in the residence is fully informed of the issues in her present life, be available to help them in ways they suggest to make her more comfortable, listen when they offer suggestions about assisting her with enjoying the safety and comfort of her new home.
You are doing terribly hard things, and the loving choices aren’t always the “best” choices, but must be made as the best accessible. Make them as objectively as you can, with love.
Some will criticize and claim that it is a sales pitch. No, I don’t believe it’s a sales pitch at all. There are no shortages of residents. Plus, there are often wait lists for good facilities, so grab the available spot!
I didn’t get the chance to place my mom, long story, but I do feel that everyone would have benefited, especially my mom.
I do worry about your mom going into the wrong type of care, particularly because that can be a real problem. My mother went into skilled nursing because I didn't know it was the wrong thing for what ailed her. She was there for seven months and would have been gone from neglect if I hadn't gotten her out of there. She didn't need skilled nursing and was allowed to be alone because she had fewer needs than the others in there. She refused to come out for meals, so they brought them to her on trays, and she slept in a chair all day and night. She developed terrible edema from her legs hanging down all the time (she never slept in a bed for seven months), and her dementia quietly became worse.
My husband is the one who said I needed to get her out of there before she wasted away. I moved her to a memory care facility near me, and she's received far better care. I have no doubt I'd have buried her two years ago if I hadn't moved her.
Consider waiting for a memory care space and keep Mom at home with an attentive caregiver until one opens up.
You say she would be lonely if left in her own home- did she say that or is that your opinion? Placing her in a facility would place her with strangers, some she may befriend and others not, a strange environment, and a different routine (meals, bedtime etc.). Her placement might not be as smooth as you hope for and envision. Your dad's death and a change in her environment so suddenly, may be very difficult for her to accept.
I don't mean to dissuade you from placing your mom in a care facility, I'm just asking you to consider some important issues. Certainly, if you've maxed out in your caregivng, there is no plan B. She should be placed for your own sanity.
Alzheimer's disease is characterized by loss of short term memory. I would suggest that moving her where she will have her needs met is paramount.
You can always visit her frequently.
I really am surprised they can not find a room in MC so they can both move into MC so she will not have to be moved again. Even moving into AL them moving to MC , even if it is a hallway or floor different will be confusing for her.
You could also have mom placed on Hospice. Then ask the Hospice Social Worker if there is anyway to "find a way" that the two can be moved in together.
If that is not possible I would move her as soon as the room becomes available.
I am so sorry for all the sorrow following you all at this time. I pray that you will all be blessed with peace and grace.
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