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If dementia is now so progressed that your loved one cannot recognize that she is in her own home I would suggest long term care in as good a facility as she is able to afford with her assets.
I wish you the best of luck.
Memory care will certainly make it easier for you, and you can still be helpful.
This is called Sundowning and is a very common dementia behavior. She is thinking about her childhood home, way back in her memory where she felt safe and secure. My Aunt did this every afternoon, even though she was sitting in her home of 48 years.
https://www.agingcare.com/articles/sundowners-syndrome-133187.htm
The answer to your posted question is: it depends.
It depends if she has the funds to pay for a facility. If she does, is there a good, reputable one in close proximity to her PoA? Does the staff engage the residents well? etc.
Providing in-home care also depends on whether she can afford aids from a good agency. Or, if a family member is willing and able to provide hands-on care and is realistic about the impact this will have on their lives and families.
I personally am fortunate to have a really excellent continuum of care facility just 3 miles from my home where my MIL is in LTC. I think being cloistered in a home with only a family member all day is a sterile environment and not good for either party. But again, it matters how good the facility is run and staffed, even if it's affordable.
‘I would never ask a family member to do caregiving! Never! It’s great if they visit and maybe bring a treat or casserole, but, I just would never impose on anyone related to be here at a set time on a set day to do caregiving. I’ve asked them to sit with him and watch TV while I go out for a few hours and I go get a pizza and leave for no more than a few hours. The last time was November! In home care is expensive. So is LTC facility where he’s at. But, I wouldn’t sleep at night knowing he’s in a terrible place.
How much of your life have you "given up" already? Do you have a family that you need to add to this equation?
Enough of my questions...
First "HOME" is not just a place.
Home can be a TIME. A time when she was well, a time when she was happy, a time when her family (mom, dad, siblings) were with her.
Home can be memories. When she was a young girl, a young wife, a young mom.
Now the question to keep mom at home or place her in memory care.
Is home safe? will she have to go up and down stairs? Are there wide halls and wide doors so the use of a walker or wheelchair will be easier? And eventually the use of equipment like a Sit to Stand and a Hoyer Lift.
Are the bathrooms large enough to get the equipment in along with 1 or 2 people to help?
Placing someone in Memory Care or Skilled Nursing is not an easy decision.
If you have bade that decision it is not one that came easy so do not let anyone tell you, or imply that you are not doing the right thing. No one else knows what you went through to make that choice.
I tole myself that I would keep my Husband home as long as it was SAFE. That being safe for HIM for me to care for him and safe for ME.
Everyone has a "line in the sand" that will end up make the decision. You do not have to justify it.
Caregivers cannot perform optimally without sleep. Also, a lack of sleep is a factor for getting dementia later in life - our brains need sleep.
There is nothing wrong with placing elderly relatives, who can no longer take care of themselves, in a care facility. It's more difficult when the elderly relative does not have any cognitive decline, and then it may be advisable to look for other alternatives (such as home care) first, if possible.
But nobody should ever feel guilty about making sure their loved ones are cared for, to the best of their ability - financial, physical and emotional.
Long term 24/7 is not sustainable and is too isolating.
my sister and I alternated living with my mother over the course of the pandemic, about 4 years. By the end of it I was a wreck and my relationship with sister was eroding. My mother was also getting worse and her behaviour was absolutely horrible. I took it upon myself to get her into a good LTC home, and while it wasn’t easy, I feel it was the best decision because her mental and physical health has stabilized. She has round the clock care, nurse practitioner, RNs and PSWs. The doctor visits every Thursday and she loves her care givers.
We visit almost every day but we are free to get on with our lives. I want to be happy, and make happy memories, I don’t want to live with trauma and have horrible feelings about my mother which was the way things were going. I hope this helps.
I agree with everything Fawnby said. Someone has to still has mange the home care and that can be a stress in itself.
norasdaughter
What many people fail to consider about in home care is the likelihood of resentment setting in. Having their privacy stripped away. Having an elder repeating themselves 1000x a day, asking you the same question every 2 minutes, even WITH full time care.....they are still taking over your home. Smelling it up with incontinence, having accidents on the rugs and furniture. Trying your patience like it's never been tried before.
If the elder is living in THEIR home with full time caregivers 24/7, there's less to contend with and less resentment that may occur. You'll still have to deal with emergencies and scheduling issues, supplies, groceries, medications, and coordinating doctors appointments, however, whereas all that is taken care of FOR you in Memory Care Assisted Living. Yes, you'll still have to order incontinence supplies from Amazon if you don't want to use theirs, and snacks if the elder likes them, but that's about it. The doctor comes to the facility, along with lab tech's, xray tech's, all sorts of things. The doc orders the meds and they're delivered directly to the AL and dispensed by the QMAPS. Food is cooked and served to the residents, along with snacks, and activities are scheduled too.
The caregivers MUST be watched at home too. Nobody should be immune from suspicion these days, in managed care or home care.
My grandmother lived with us while I was growing up. Mom and she were at each others throats constantly, but mom was the martyr for taking her in 🙄. Who cares that my life was ruined, or moms mental health was in ruins too, or that gram had a miserable life? The Almighty Obligation superseded common sense and everyone paid the dues.
The moral of the story is this: Do what's best for EVERYONE in this situation. Dementia is a terribly difficult thing to deal with. The staff at my mother's Memory Care Assisted Living facility did a fantastic job of caring for her and even though I still did a ton for her, she wasn't grinding on my last nerve 24/7. That's worth it's weight in GOLD.