A bad side effect of caregiving my parents has been that I am becoming more and more afraid of getting old. Watching what they have gone through has let me know I do not want to go through the same thing. It has made me hope that I check out of life before I get old.
My MIL had vascular dementia and was in a nursing home in England. I never visited her but hubby did and describes her room as comfortable but not homely in any way more like a small hotel room. her mental condition was worse than most of the other residents and the N/H wanted to transfer her to a memory care facility. She knew about that and wrote to us saying they were going to put her in the "looney bin" She has attacked staff with her walker by then and acusses them of abuse. My SIL was visiting frequently and would have investigated such incidents so mostly it was delusions. My SIL took wonderful care of both in laws. That is alll I know. We are fortunate in the we have kids who do care about us.
But does this make me feel better? No. Because I will never be able to afford it. My mom's place is super and a tad less expensive than the run-of-the-mill places around here! Still, it is $4,000 a month all together with meds, etc. My parents would never have dreamed that her needs would exceed their income. They had invested some mad money in their 60s-70s. That mad money now is making up the difference between her income ($3K/mo.) and her out-go. But I don't think I will have those kinds of funds when I need the care, say, in 20 years. God, what will it cost then?
So in answer to your question, not all nursing homes are a horror show.
I think it depends on the level of care a person is receiving also. If a person needs round the clock monitoring then a hospital setting would probably be more ideal and therefore the two beds and t.v. with a chair for a visitor would probably be the case.
So, how to avoid it when I'm old if I make it that long? Better take better care of myself and look into long term insurance.
I'm too much of an introvert to be able to stand living with just a curtain between me and another person. Every time my dad is in the hospital, that happens and we have yet to have him get a roommate that doesn't consider the other guy.
We'll keep each other young, and make sure there is a "youngster" to join us when we have a room that opens up (by 'youngster', I mean someone we all know and like who can still drive and run errands, and etc.).
I've honestly been planning this type of scenario since I was in my mid-40s and widowed. Now I'm remarried, but he's on board, too.
By the way, those of us who are suicidal don't need any advice on how to do it.
I can't believe I'm writing this for what appears to me to be such a totally apolitical bunch. But I guess my reputation for being nice is as the blasted oak anyway, what with me finding robots interesting. God, I am rotten at being old.
I think the very fact the baby boomer generation which makes up a huge percentage of the population are finding themselves in the unenviable position of having to care for their aging loved ones is bringing this topic to the forefront and soon the politicians will have to start taking it seriously. We can only hope!!
Race, religion, and sexual orientation are not something I worry about. The only thing I dislike is snooty elders. They aren't much fun to be around. I hope to be around fun people who like talking politics. And yes, movingup, I'm very politics oriented. Ultra liberal independent.
1. NY Times article from May 17, 2012 saying that whites account for under half of the births in the US.
2. Newsweek report June 13, 2013 on the census saying white majority gone by 2043 in US
And there are other articles that I found from that google search.