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This is false. Believe it or not, there’s actually facilities out there that have caring staff who want the best for their patients and aren’t trying to kill people.
What “someone” clearly explained this to you?
You will learn a lot just by visiting and observing.
If you see no one in the hallways, that is also an indicator, especially if your wife enjoys company. Some places encourage their residents to get out of their rooms, some places prefer their residents to stay in their rooms and watch TV. (Warning: some places will recommend drugs to keep their residents in the behavior spectrum that they want.)
Look at the walls of the hallways. Some places provide tactile activity on the walls to keep the brain stimulated. Some provide soft music. Some places have to keep hallways extremely clean as they have patients that pick stuff off the floor thinking it is food.
Go to the same place at different times of the day and different days to see if your first observations were really a good sample of what is happening.
Some places have Assisted Living in the same building as Memory Care. Therefore, you could live in AL at the same time your wife lives in MC. This can make it much more convenient to visit her and for you to have company.
From what you learn, you can decide what is the proper time and place for her.
Good luck on your journey!
Navigating this whole process with no direction is devistating. AL is NOT covered by Medicare. If you do not have long term care insurance or longterm care planned, expect your retirement savings to be depleted over time in hope's there is enough left for the other spouse.
We had to move the one with dementia to MC, so we moved her out of the glitz & glam to the same place the other one is in.
Small, clean & homey, better communication, not great but better.
We visited 15 homes before we picked the original ones, do your homework.
My friends mom was in a board and care that cost about 5k in 2016. It being on the smaller side, everyone tended to congregate naturally with lots of 1 on 1. The top rated mc here is only 23 units, costs about 7.5k, and offers different choices of activities. One can have aides take them out to shuck peas in their vegetable garden or look at their chickens. If they don’t want to go out, there’s the indoor activity room. And if a senior would just like to stay in their room and watch tv or read, they will go in periodically to check up on her, make sure she’s not wet or hungry, watch part of a show.
These options are far more than you typical corporate ones.
Best of luck to you, Brian.
Do this will give you insights into setting up your own end-of-life care.