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Lots of facilities look good and the admissions person (sales person) is very friendly. Sadly, things can change after the check is written and your loved one arrives.
Giving up caring for your Mom at your home is replaced with the worry of how she is truly being cared for at a facility.
Make sure you know exactly how the facility is handling the pandemic as far as what would happen if staff, residents or your Mom became positive.
If you decide to admit your mom, make sure to get a first floor room with an outside facing window. (At the beginning of the pandemic, my Mom was in a courtyard facing room so we were unable to do window visits. Then after another fall, she was at a skilled nursing facility for short term rehab on the third floor. A staff member tested positive so bringing residents down to the first floor window for visits stopped.)
In New York State, each time a staff member or resident tests positive, visits are stopped for 28 days. If people keep testing positive, the date to resume visits gets pushed out further and further.
Infection control is difficult:
Your Mom could get Covid in the facility or at your home. No one - even yourself and your husband - can do everything perfectly and might expose her.
At the facilities my Mom has been in recently (due to recent falls, hospitalizations and rehab stays), we have seen staff touch residents (hand shaking, fist pumping, back rubbing) without gloves on during non-caregiving activities.
We have seen staff remove their masks and within inches of my Mom’s face speak into her ear (hearing impaired).
Facilities promise they will do everything they can to keep you in touch with your loved one. However, that was not the case in our experience. Getting ahold of a staff member after 3:00pm weekdays or anytime on weekends was a joke. One facility did not have a staff member dedicated to answering the phone and it was up to the aids who could not be bothered.
I just wanted to mention these things because what you intend to be a respite situation could turn into something entirely different.
With any luck it would turn out ok, but I think it’s good to be informed about what could happen.
Wow - What an excellent response and you are so right when it comes to the first impressions of a facility. They use every marketing tactic they can think of to make it all sound too good to be true and guess what - it usually is too good to be true to some degree.
Also, my mom had a window facing the courtyard at her previous facility so I did just as you mentioned when we looked for a new one in May. Now, her apartment has two windows!
You said the worrying, in essence, follows you if you place them in a facility and I couldn't agree more with that statement as well.
Like I said, great advice so thank you on behalf of all caregivers!
It’s such a struggle with no help . The VA in Tx only gives 30 days a year and 6 hrs at a time to have a caregiver to help me. Taking care of a dementia relative is not easy. I bought cameras where I can watch him while he’s in bed sleeping .
He doesn’t want to eat much at all so the Dr put him on Glucerna and he loves yogurt. I was so worried but the Dr said people are living just on those and doing good. He’s not lost weight and it seems to work good for him all his blood work was good. You will always love and want the best for your Parents but also know they want the best for you. No one can go visit their loved ones in nursing homes now. I wish you the very best . Pray for her God is always there to listen and help. God bless you and keep you all safe in his healing hands . 🙏🙏😍❤️🌺🌷
She would be safer and happier staying home with people she knows and loves.
You can get care at home help from her Ins Co for helping bathe her a couple times a week and therapy a couple times during the week and will provide a Nurse to check on it.
You will have to hire a Caregiver for spending the nights out of your own pocket and if you look hard enough find someone for $8 - $10 Hr.
You might also adk her Dr if she can take a rx to help her sleep thru the night.
When I was helping with my 96 yr old Dad 24 7, I had to learn to sleep when he slept, like I did when I had a Baby.
Last week I contacted a facility that only cares for dementia patients. It has a good reputation and actually has 4 openings. I think it is outrageously expensive, but have been assured by others that their costs are "in range." However, I absolutely refuse to pack my mother up and take her to a "strange" place and leave her, especially with the lockdown situation where I would not be able to visit her once she is there. In my head, I see her alone and frightened and so confused about why she is now in yet another place! I don't think she would do well. I know it won't be long before she will have declined to the point where I can not care for her. I already don't sleep much at night, trying to be sure she is not up and wandering around with her walker.
I, too, have concerns about bringing in outside help in the Covid world. One part of me knows that I need to be doing my homework and finding a "good" facility but Covid makes everything so difficult. Your idea of trying out the respite care aspect is interesting. I always wondered about having a "trial period" where you could determine if the facility was a good fit for a loved one. I know the facility in which I am interested offers respite care but I'm not sure for what amount of time.
I absolutely hate this disease.... and Covid, too!
Your mother is just as likely, if not more likely, to contract the virus at your home as she is in a Memory Care home. The precautions they take are under the auspices of the Dept of Health and even if the virus does occur, the patient is isolated away from the others. Life happens, there or in your home or anywhere. God decides when our number is up, not us. We mortals have no control over that. Your mother either needs full time professional care or she doesn't. You second guessing yourself isn't going to help you OR her; it will just confuse the situation further. What's best for MOM? That is the question to ask, not 'what if' this that or the other.
If you can no longer handle your mom at home, which is what normally happens with advanced dementia, then it's time to place her. That is what's best for the loved one, imo, because they get care 24/7 from teams of people trained in that field.
See what their rules are about visiting; at my mom's MC, we can schedule outside visits or window visits which we do every Sunday. It works well and we get to see one another w/o incident or worry.
I know how hard this all is; try not to overthink it. Say a prayer and then leave it in God's hands, you know? Your goal needs to be maximizing EVERYONE'S comfort and quality of life here, not just your mother's. Her life is not the only one that's important; ALL of your lives are equally as important. Many care givers get lost and wind up thinking the ONLY life that matters is the elders', and that's not true. Know without a doubt that she WILL be well cared for at the MC, if you decide to place her, and leave it at that.
Wishing you the best of luck, whatever your decision turns out to be. Sending you a hug and a prayer for peace
There is no guarantee with "anything" in life including whether we will live to see tomorrow regardless of whether we are young or old, in good health or poor.
I think you have an opportunity that as you stated, would not only provide you and your husband with a respite but, give you the ability to see if your mom would be happy at that particular facility without a full commitment.
In my case, my 95-year old mom who has Alzheimer's lived in an AL facility since early 2015 right up until the pandemic happened. The facility was in lockdown since March 13 and one month later, my mom was near death from severe dehydration and contracting COVID-19. Her room faced an inner courtyard where we could not "window visit" so my husband bought her an iPad in order for us to "see" how she looked as that would be the first clue if something wasn't right. It worked fairly well until she was no longer able to get to the iPad from her bedroom to the living room where it was next to her couch.
After her hospital stay, she was transported to a rehab facility for almost three weeks giving us time to find a new facility which was extremely difficult at best. Once, we finally found one that would allow someone who was recovering from the virus, we moved her into their memory care wing. She was no longer able to walk, dress herself and had lost 20 lbs. from not eating which meant she now qualified for hospice care involvement. That being said, the facility amazingly had no COVID cases and wanted to keep it that way so they quarantined my mom for two weeks upon arriving from rehab and she was tested again twice - once to be allowed to move in and again to be taken out of quarantine. A month later, the facility got their first COVID case which was someone in the memory care wing (they did pass away a week later). This facility is well run and they really handled everything quickly along with sending us all letters with updates. They decided to have all residents and staff tested every week for two weeks until they were free of it which they currently are.
So even under the best circumstances and being in a great facility - things can still happen. Everything is a "risk" in life and I hate to say it but "fear" can really be our downfall in what otherwise may give us something to help things be a better situation for all involved.
I understand the "would of, could of, should of" but, at some point we just have to remember we are doing the best we can with any given situation and at any given time. We can never control any aspect in life as much as we may want to. Caregiving is and always will be a learning curve as well as this journey of life.
You both seem to have a great opportunity here - I hope you don't miss it. Because if somewhere down the line the virus gets worse again, facilities may not be taking in new residents. That's somewhat where we were when my mom was released from the hospital and rehab facility. We kept striking out trying to find a good, new place for her as I was not going to be sending her back to her previous facility if I could help it. They had a lot of cases as well as deaths - over 22 deaths and there's only an 85 resident capacity.
One last thing, you will never be able to predict the outcome if your mom were to get COVID. At 95, I thought for sure she was going to die in the hospital and that I would never have seen her or been able to say "goodbye." She survived and other than losing her strength, I see her outside her window frequently and she is doing as well as can be expected! Good luck to you all and I hope you will share an update!
You saying this... "I understand the "would of, could of, should of" but, at some point we just have to remember we are doing the best we can with any given situation and at any given time. We can never control any aspect in life as much as we may want to. Caregiving is and always will be a learning curve as well as this journey of life." ...really hit home for me. We are, right? Doing the best we can, trying to make all the right decisions and everything is part of the learning curve as no two caregiving situations will ever be the same. We cannot predict nor control outcomes for a lot of things in life.
Thank you for taking the time to respond and I will share an update. I submitted quite the list of questions and concerns to the facility so we will go from there.
Know that whatever decision you make it is the right one for you and your family. Don't let people guilt you about it and don't second guess yourself. We are all just doing the best we can with the information we have at the time.
It's actually great that your dad already had an established life in a facility before Covid. Even though he is cooped up, at least he is safe in familiar surroundings with friends. That's huge.
We have been endlessly weighing all options to come up with the best solution for us at this point. We had initially wanted to do in home care but finding the right caregiver was a challenge. And in a very short period of time, her dementia has continued to worsen. Initially, it was a lot of hallucinating and delusions, mainly during the night and now it's day and night, along with constant confusion and disorientation. No matter what medication we have tried, she never sleeps through the night and will come out of her room and wake us up. So life continues to get more and more challenging, which is why we started to look into memory care options. The facility we found is in lock down, however, it has an outdoor park and encourages "outside visits" from family members. I still suspect her anxiety will kick into high gear and she will be trying to call me all the time but hopefully the activities will keep her occupied.
The bulk of the questions we submitted to them have to do with Covid so once we get those back, we will take it from there.
Thank you for the support!
It is not possible to completely avoid risk. It is possible that you or your husband could bring it home and give it to your mom. Even with being careful, these invisible germies are sneaky.