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1. If you had a hard time actually getting them into residential care, do you REALLY want to relive that drama when it is time to go back and they throw a "mother of all colossal fits" in order to stay home.
2. If the house was not exactly as it was the moment they left, it will become a THING or an obsession.
In my father's case, he has the most nasty, smelly, gross Archie Bunker sofa and chair that needed to go. One of my brothers brought him home after much whining and guilting....and the stuff hit the fan because a family member moved into the house and put their own furniture in part of it.
The loss of the scruffy couch has become a full blown OBSESSION, and I am sure that house will be haunted looking for that couch that now is nowhere to be found. There is a lot of mileage to any visitor to please, please, make sure my kids put my couch back where it belongs.
Clean break advice is the best.
Do you have her medical POA? If so, then it is your responsibility to see that she goes to where she is going to get the best care. If you don't have medical POA, then who does?
Also, where are her own adult children like your mom or dad? What are their thoughts and feelings? Why have they left all of this on you?
This is your and her best chance to get her the 24 hour care she needs by people working in three 8 hour shifts who get to go home.
Otherwise, you will have to try to do 24/7 care by yourself until she has a medical emergency like a fall and ends up in the hospital at which point her dementia would be worse.
I don't think that a short visit to say good bye would be a good idea for she would keep asking to stay longer.
My mother was terrorized by my sister and a niece (daughter of my deceased brother), who both claimed to be wanting the best for my mother. My mother and I had a workable plan in place, that insured my mother's happiness to the greatest extent possible. It turned out the other "family members" didn't want to be "stuck" with having to help (they didn't "have to" since my mother had enough money to hire help). Getting people to be forthcoming with their real (and underlying) thinking is NOT easy and usually requires some work.
So, again -- "it depends" is the only honest answer.
Once dementia is active in the picture, there's also the point about how much longer to wait; and that - if it's a racing certainty that the person will eventually have to be in memory care sometime - then her best chance of settling in well to a facility and forming meaningful relationships with the staff depends on moving in there as a functioning human being, with a personality and interests, rather than as a parcel of needs in a wheelchair.
Really good memory care facilities will respect all their residents as people, that's best practice; but it's so much easier to see them as people if you get to know them before they've completely vanished.
The word "safe" can be cruel, and even that word depends - safe from what would be the question. Safe from life is cruel IMO. Plus, there is really no such thing as "safe," anyway, since people in nursing homes and "memory care" centers can and do fall and get injured. If they are made to be in a wheel chair (for their safety, of course), they can and do try to get out and fall in that process (I've seen that more than once).
None of the responses here have even mentioned help at the affected person's home. That would have to be in my list of considerations.
But, first and foremost, I would take the "happiness" of the "subject" into consideration. If my grandmother still recognized me and other family members, it would be my opinion that she still had enough of her mental faculties to say what would make her happy - and I believe her "happiness" should be the first consideration - unless her brain function is so far gone that nothing makes her happy any longer, in which case everybody else's responses here would be at least okay.
#1 She's never going to want to leave the house.
#2 She's going to be talking about "her house, her house, her house"-there's never going to be an end to it.
#3 To what purpose does it serve to make this elder sad?
#4 Perhaps she's not even lucid enough to know that it's her house.
You are very considerate granddaughter. This is a hard one. When my grandmother was admitted to hospital. My aunts used this opportunity to move her to a nursing home. My grandmother asked to go home, but no one would support her in this decision. She is not even allowed to visit! I guess it depends if your grandmother asks to visit. I normally try to do what others want and given her age, this might be the respectful thing to do.
This is difficult, telling the truth is different with someone with dementia. It could upset them to the point that the will get extremely agitated and confused.
Get some guidance on this from a dementia expert. When I moved my mom and then sold her house, I was told NOT to take her to her house again. I am so glad I didn't. Mom never accepted her Alzheimer's diagnosis. In her mind, she is fine. When she went to adult day care - she worked there. Now she lives in a memory care center and she has no clue she lives in an a assisted living community. There brain doesn't reason like a normal brain anymore.
Saying goodbye to her home, which she never will return to, I think would be too painful for her. If I did that with my mom, I think she would have refused to leave. Transitioning her from rehab, will be so much easier.
Once she transitions to her new home, she may even forget her current home. My mom has been in memory care for 6 months now. She has no recollection of living with me, sometimes I am her sister and sometimes I am her daughter. She asks about her siblings and parents that have been dead for decades and never speaks of the home she lived in for over 60 years. It is sad, but you can take comfort in that she will continue to lose her memories and will no longer remember the home she lived in.
This may seem selfish but do what is easier for you too, which would be the transition from rehab.
I know it's horrible to hear your loved one cry, "I want to go home." But please ask yourself if your grandmother is in a state where she is cognizant and aware of her condition. Is she mentally and physically capable of assisting in her own care? If the answer is no to any of those questions, you must do what is right for your gram and make sure you find a reputable, clean, and well staffed facility for a long-term stay. Please make sure they have a secure memory unit with staff equipped to help a person with dementia.
If your gram asks about home, I firmly believe the best thing to do is redirect, keep her calm and help her let go of the idea and move on to something else. Arguing with her or trying to reason will only make her more insistent, agitated, and distressed (as it did my gram. We learned the hard way). I would not advise you to go for a car ride past the house, walk her by the house or allow her to return to the home for even a day or two. Getting her to leave again will be extremely hard, and you may be more shocked to find her version of 'home' after she's returned isn't the home she was talking about all along. Best of luck. My thoughts are with you, your family and grandmother as you deal with this.
When my mom moved to a nursing home, never to return to her home, I was honest about it, but very very gently. I told her that I'd found her another place to live, that it was a "retirement community," that it was closer to me and I'd be able to see her every day (both true). I told her she would never have to be alone again (she feared being alone). I told her there would be nurses and other workers there to help her 24 hours a day. I also told her if she really hated it, she could leave. This is also true. I neglected to mention that the move would be to a different facility instead of home. She never asked to leave. One thing that helped was doing A LOT of research beforehand. I contacted 22 nursing homes in my area and tour 17, many of them 2 to 3 times. I applied to the 4 that were acceptable to me and she was accepted by 1. Comparably, it's a nice facility and making a careful choice in the first place will help you if you have any doubts about your decision. My mom has a private room, which is a plus, and we visit often. We've made her room nice with her own hamper, colorful comforter, lamp, vase of fake flowers, and (very important) a clock with the time, date, and day of the week. But I digress....
I feel firmly that you should give her a version of the truth she can handle. Be as honest as possible, as gently as possible. You would want someone to do that for you.
As for taking her to say goodbye to her house, if that's coupled with news of a sale or someone else moving in, I think that may be unnecessarily cruel. Love is your guide. You will know what she can handle.
I know we were very lucky but she actually never asked when she was going home. And, when she did mention home it was her childhood home. Keep in mind, the dementia prevents your grandmothe from thinking clearly so family has to make things as easy as possible for her.
When it became certain that my 96 year old great aunt would not be able to return to her home, we still kept up the fiction that she was going to residential care to convalesce - helpful that in the olden days, when she was a gal, nursing homes often were called convalescent homes - and that story never had to change. We kept her apartment ticking over; and as a matter of fact had she ever wanted to go and see it we'd have been happy to take her. But not many people are as stoical and blithe in their outlook as darling auntie was, may her memory be for a blessing...
Anyway. If you are becoming concerned that your mother is in for a nasty shock at the end of rehab, you'd better start gently preparing her. Don't tell her what's happening: instead, ask her questions. Such as "suppose we thought about getting you better first, giving you more time to build your strength up - how would you feel about trying that?" or "What has the doctor said about your being able to go home? There's still quite a lot to think about, you know." So that you're working round to a "not yet" rather than a flat "no." And for heaven's sake don't get into an argument about it! We'll see, or let's see, or one thing at a time, or maybe, or even we'll do our best - these are all useful responses to keep in mind.
She is in fact mentioning home. Whenever I talk to her or visit her at rehab she says she wants to go home. So far I have danced around the issue and avoided saying things like "you have to do your best at PT so you can go home!".
I believe that when she says she wants to go home, she is indeed talking about her current residence, not childhood home, etc.
The amount of time remaining in rehab depends on her progress and participation. Something like 10-20 days.
I don't really think she's looking ahead at the plan per se. In her mind there is only one possible plan: going home!
Either your grandmother is looking ahead and asking what the plan is, in which case she has a right to be involved in the discussion and to express a view of her own;
Or she isn't, in which case you go ahead and develop a care plan in consultation with her health care team and decide on her behalf what options overall would be least upsetting for her (including whether or not to raise the subject of her home - I personally would vote 'no' unless she herself brings it up).
How much more time to do you have to work with before she needs to move on from rehab?
Some have found taking their love one back to see the house one more time created a terrible problem.... the elder refused to leave the house to get back into the car.
If Grandmother is asking to go "home", you need to quiz her to find out which home is she talking about. For my Mom, I thought it was the house that she and Dad had sheared for many decades.... turned it it was her childhood home from the late 1900-1920's that she wanted to go back and see.
At Assisted Living bring items from her home, hang up pictures that she always likes. For my Dad, his prize possessions where hundreds of books, so we brought that along with all the bookcases which thankfully fitted.