Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My dad is looking to move into an independent living facility. It does not have the continuum of care, so if his needs advance, we will need to move him to assisted living or skilled nursing. No dementia, just diabetes and general loneliness as he is a widower.
What should we consider? This is our first parent to make this choice.
I don't know what area you are in but the costs are astronomical. We are looking into the route of a home nurse which will be cheaper than the $15K a month quotes we are getting.
Anonymous wrote:My parents moved to one last year. The assisted living is completely separate but available if needed. The independent living has so many social activities available. It’s fantastic for them. They have no complaints.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My dad is looking to move into an independent living facility. It does not have the continuum of care, so if his needs advance, we will need to move him to assisted living or skilled nursing. No dementia, just diabetes and general loneliness as he is a widower.
What should we consider? This is our first parent to make this choice.
I don't know what area you are in but the costs are astronomical. We are looking into the route of a home nurse which will be cheaper than the $15K a month quotes we are getting.
Where are you looking that the costs are so high? It should be about a third of that for IL.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My dad is looking to move into an independent living facility. It does not have the continuum of care, so if his needs advance, we will need to move him to assisted living or skilled nursing. No dementia, just diabetes and general loneliness as he is a widower.
What should we consider? This is our first parent to make this choice.
I don't know what area you are in but the costs are astronomical. We are looking into the route of a home nurse which will be cheaper than the $15K a month quotes we are getting.
Anonymous wrote:My dad is looking to move into an independent living facility. It does not have the continuum of care, so if his needs advance, we will need to move him to assisted living or skilled nursing. No dementia, just diabetes and general loneliness as he is a widower.
What should we consider? This is our first parent to make this choice.
Anonymous wrote:It's a lot easier to move to a place that has it all now then it is to force a move later. Also, when it is time for another move it's not like you can expect your life to be carefree so you can easily help. Most of the emergencies we dealt with came at the worst times. I would encourage him to look at CCRCs. I will be blunt. A lot of elders are snooty about being around those more impaired because it scares them. Usually those with more needs are in a separate area and have their own dining room. We had the issue of an elder who had more needs, but only wanted to be around those who were independent. She complained incessantly about all the people with the same needs she had and how disabled they were, but I digress.