Follow
Share

Dad comes home on Hospice today. We had made arrangements for both parents to go to assisted living next week and now Mom who has Alzheimer’s, will lose him before the move. Friends in the medical field tell me she should still go and soon. There isn’t room yet in the Memory Care Unit and she’d have to be in a room alone until there is. They say she would leave the door open and can come and go from her room. Not sure if it’s better to have her in her home, lonely with a caregiver or go where there are more people around but in a new environment?

This question has been closed for answers. Ask a New Question.
Move her as soon as you can, with the thinking on your part that the sooner she enters her new home, the sooner she’ll be able to adjust to it.

If you take her to her previous home, or your home, or any other home, then there will be the jolt of leaving there, and the fewer jolts and changes, the less unsettling the transition.

Be sure the staff in the residence is fully informed of the issues in her present life, be available to help them in ways they suggest to make her more comfortable, listen when they offer suggestions about assisting her with enjoying the safety and comfort of her new home.

You are doing terribly hard things, and the loving choices aren’t always the “best” choices, but must be made as the best accessible. Make them as objectively as you can, with love.
Helpful Answer (7)
Report

Can you possibly carry on with the plan to move them both to Assisted Living. There really is no way to tell when your dad will die.
I really am surprised they can not find a room in MC so they can both move into MC so she will not have to be moved again. Even moving into AL them moving to MC , even if it is a hallway or floor different will be confusing for her.
You could also have mom placed on Hospice. Then ask the Hospice Social Worker if there is anyway to "find a way" that the two can be moved in together.
If that is not possible I would move her as soon as the room becomes available.
Helpful Answer (1)
Report

I think it would be kinder to move her sooner than later. You can’t take away the changes and sadness for her, but a new environment may actually be a help
Helpful Answer (3)
Report

Never wait until the very last minute to move anyone. When I was touring facilities for my mom, I heard over and over to place her before I absolutely had to. It will give your mom additional time to adjust to her surroundings.

Some will criticize and claim that it is a sales pitch. No, I don’t believe it’s a sales pitch at all. There are no shortages of residents. Plus, there are often wait lists for good facilities, so grab the available spot!

I didn’t get the chance to place my mom, long story, but I do feel that everyone would have benefited, especially my mom.
Helpful Answer (3)
Report

IMHO, I think moving mom will be in her best interest. While I don't know why they call your mom stage 4-1/2 Alzheimer's. Each person has different symptoms and these stages as they call them are ever changing. The person can be in any given stage for weeks, months, years and then have a setback with deeper in the stage or new symptoms added.
Mover forward with the plans, of you don't, she may not have a place to go as your mom's Alzheimer's progresses at whatever pace.
Helpful Answer (0)
Report

All moves and changes are difficult for older people, especially for people with dementia who are not able to understand what is happening to them. If she will have to move twice in the assisted living facility (from a large room to a smaller room) this may also cause extra stress. Would there be a much longer wait for the smaller room? If she loses her husband, this will also cause stress. It's going to be a difficult time for her and you. All the best to you and the family.
Helpful Answer (0)
Report

I had to move my mom three days after my dad's funeral. It was a huge blow to her and I regret having to do it, but I had to go home after caring for them full-time for the previous two months.

I do worry about your mom going into the wrong type of care, particularly because that can be a real problem. My mother went into skilled nursing because I didn't know it was the wrong thing for what ailed her. She was there for seven months and would have been gone from neglect if I hadn't gotten her out of there. She didn't need skilled nursing and was allowed to be alone because she had fewer needs than the others in there. She refused to come out for meals, so they brought them to her on trays, and she slept in a chair all day and night. She developed terrible edema from her legs hanging down all the time (she never slept in a bed for seven months), and her dementia quietly became worse.

My husband is the one who said I needed to get her out of there before she wasted away. I moved her to a memory care facility near me, and she's received far better care. I have no doubt I'd have buried her two years ago if I hadn't moved her.

Consider waiting for a memory care space and keep Mom at home with an attentive caregiver until one opens up.
Helpful Answer (3)
Report

I too would move mom to the chosen facility as it seems to be in her best interest. It is really too bad that she can't move directly into MC to have a set routine to enable her to have the best chance at success. Making these decisions are always hard - it is hard to know what the right decision is.

I am so sorry for all the sorrow following you all at this time. I pray that you will all be blessed with peace and grace.
Helpful Answer (0)
Report

Moving her to a care facility depends not so much on this stage (stage 4) of AD, but moreso on where YOU are in caring for her. There are no stages of caregiving (maybe some psychiatrist can come up with some). Each caregiver must decide when, and if, their LO should be relocated. Many people with AD live out their entire lives at home. There are limits to everyone's caregiving ability, and there are reasons to place a LO because of safety, incontinence, or wandering, for example.

You say she would be lonely if left in her own home- did she say that or is that your opinion? Placing her in a facility would place her with strangers, some she may befriend and others not, a strange environment, and a different routine (meals, bedtime etc.). Her placement might not be as smooth as you hope for and envision. Your dad's death and a change in her environment so suddenly, may be very difficult for her to accept.

I don't mean to dissuade you from placing your mom in a care facility, I'm just asking you to consider some important issues. Certainly, if you've maxed out in your caregivng, there is no plan B. She should be placed for your own sanity.
Helpful Answer (2)
Report

I don't think you should move her twice.. the change is very hard for them.
Helpful Answer (0)
Report

Move mom.

if she remembers he has died
... acknowledge that and tell her dad would like her to live there.

if she doesnt remember ... they moved together and he has gone to the bank ? Grocery ? Outside for a short walk ? so you and your mom could have some chat time together and he’ll be back in a few minutes.
Helpful Answer (0)
Report

I know that you are experiencing a huge amount of stress and already dealing with loss. You will have memories and issues to deal with regarding the passing of your dad. If you are executor of his will, that job can take a year to complete. In addition, you are trying to deal with placement of your mom. You are anticipating that she will mourn the loss with you. Caring for her needs while dealing with your own is going to be extremely difficult.

Alzheimer's disease is characterized by loss of short term memory. I would suggest that moving her where she will have her needs met is paramount.
You can always visit her frequently.
Helpful Answer (2)
Report

Whatever you decide, please know there will be negatives. There is no perfect answer. Please allow yourself to make the best decision in YOUR opinion. Here’s what I did in similar circumstances. When my step-dad (her caretaker) died, I could not move her. It felt cruel for her to lose her husband and her home and everything she knew. I moved in with her for 6 months. Paid in-home sitter, so I could work. My husband brought us dinner every evening. After 6 months, moved her into assisted living. None of it was easy.
Helpful Answer (2)
Report

Moving is hard on those with dementia (all changes are, so the loss of her husband may have an impact as well.)

Questions:
* how hard/fast is the impending loss?
* how long do they anticipate the space in MC?
* were/are they living with you and for how long?
* would you lose the MC if you opt not to move her to AL?

If your dad really will pass within the week, this is a tough decision. Some really do pass quickly (after a second stroke, my mother lasted only a day), but others can sometimes rally and linger on for much longer.

You will have your hands full while your dad is still living. Hospice isn't there 24/7, so you'll have to juggle his care with hers. It's also hard to make judgement because "staging" and dementia can be capricious. How capable is she? Can she do any self care? Is she mobile? Is she a wandering risk or other danger? If she's relatively capable and the facility can hold the MC slot until there is space, I'd almost want to wait. One move vs two and a better situation for her. I'd have concerns about them saying leave her door open - in AL there isn't 24/7 supervision, so she could wander about or even out when no one is watching her. If you do choose to move her to AL while waiting for MC, I would suggest hiring someone to be with her. When it was time to move our mother, my YB kept insisting on AL, but I disagreed and so did staff. There was nothing to prevent her walking out the door and becoming lost!

Generally there is an "adjustment" period for the person to become more acclimated to a new place. They suggested we stay away for about 2 weeks, to let her get into a routine. In her case, they were just reopening after a rebuild, and for about a week, she was the only MC resident. They would often take her upstairs, with supervision, to mingle with others. There's no guarantee your mom, unless she is/was extremely social, to get benefit initially from being around others in a strange new environment. Mom had the benefit of being doted on, and having only a few at a time move in, over several months.

When your dad passes, she may not be able to or retain the news. If not, as suggested, have answers as to where he is when she asks - use places that would make sense to her - at work, shopping, getting car repairs, fishing, whatever he used to do that she would remember (it may have to be old memories!) If her short term memory is gone, you'd have to tell her over and over again that he passed and she would have to go through that pain over and over. It is much kinder to keep his memory alive and use fibs to fill in the gaps.

If the facility is willing to forgo the AL and wait for the MC space, it might be best to keep her home and hire someone. When the space opens up, I would even keep the caregiver on for a while, to help her "navigate" and get used to the new space, so she'd have a familiar face to help her through that.

So sorry about your dad and impending loss. Keeping mom home a bit longer might also be beneficial to you, so you don't "lose" both at the same time. You've already lost a bit of mom, so use this time to forge a bond with her, and perhaps be able to "support" each other, before the move happens.
Helpful Answer (0)
Report

Imho, move her sooner rather than later.
Helpful Answer (1)
Report

This question has been closed for answers. Ask a New Question.
Ask a Question
Subscribe to
Our Newsletter