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bathing, dressing, toileting, transferring (getting in and out of bed or chair), eating, and continence.
My Mom needed help with dressing, bathing, and incontinence. She could feed herself. I remember no physical assessment. Her neurologist signed off she needed care. She went from an AL into LTC. Already being in MC shows she cannot be on her own. And you can't be forced to care for her.
I'm not sure we here on this forum can answer your question. The doctors and facility have their own criteria they follow.
A few years ago my 100-yr old Aunt with advanced dementia got up out of bed, forgetting she can't walk unattended, and fell in her own home and broke her hip. We passed on surgery and I was in the process of finding her facility care (in south FL) and was sweating whether she'd qualify for LTC or not since she was still even in the rehab attempting to get out of bed. She passes away in the rehab facility on the morning she was due to have her assessment, so I never got to know the answer.
You may want to consider a faith-based facility where they see care as a mission, not a business model (my MIL is in this type of LTC facility here in MN and receives stellar care). I feel for you... I hope it works out for her!