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My mother had heart failure, macular degeneration, and dementia. She started in skilled nursing and she nearly died in there because she was largely neglected. She was "sick" enough to warrant much attention.
I finally wised up and decided I wanted to focus on what would improve her life the most, and since the heart failure was controlled with medication but wasn't going to be cured, I decided to focus on her mental health more. Yes, the dementia progressed, too, but in MC she had activities, had caregivers who engaged with her constantly, and it was a more sociable existence. They were able to handle all her medical needs as well, so she was able to remain there the rest of her life. She was infinitely happier there.
Any advice. Her son and family have tried to get her transferred but the facility says it’s California law that a dementia dx requires a locked MC placement. I live in MN so only see her 2x a year but common sense suggests that the unit someone lives in should be based on need not diagnosis. ????
In my situation, Mom had 20k after being in an AL. That covered 2 months private pay in LTC. I started the Medicaid application in April, placed Mom May 1st in LTC, she paid May and June. In June I confirmed with the Medicaid caseworker that I had supplied all info needed and Mom was spent down. July 1st Medicaid started. My State gives 90 days from date of application to...get the caseworker info needed, spent down and find a facility. If not done in 90days, the application has to be started over.
Usually someone going into SN needs more than an AL can provide. My Mom got in because she was in the last stages of Dementia. She needed 24/7 care. When you research facilities, this is question you need to ask them. Having a letter from a doctor saying the person needs 24/7 care in a facility may help.
Does the AL say that she needs too much care to live there anymore?
I wonder if she needs a nursing home or memory care? If the reason for her needing to leave AL is her dementia, then maybe MC is a better fit? If her needs are more medical, then a nursing home might be more appropriate.
Good luck.
Although dementia IS a medical problem their is no public funding for assisted living care for folks on limited income. The cost for assisted living is out of reach for many. Hope I’m wrong about this, and welcome information.
Hope you filed complaints at the state level for nursing negligence: silence is probably the biggest cause of suffering in that industry.