Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why do you think memory care is not a good fit?
OP here. Memory care settings lack privacy and residents with a wide range of behaviors are grouped together in large communal spaces. My grandmother would absolutely hate it. She may not know what day it is or what she ate for breakfast, but she knows that she doesn't want to be forced to sit in a locked room all day with a bunch of other people. She has always been a solitary person, happiest at home with a good book and a dog at her feet. Many memory care settings also seem to have programming designed to keep residents active and engaged. She would hate this too. She just wants to be left in peace. I understand that the activities are meant to enhance quality of life and have benefits, but at 93 years old, the value of this type of therapeutic programming is pretty limited. If I'm wrong about memory care, please correct me. But this is what I deduced by researching programs online.
My mom is in her own private 2 room apartment in memory care. All memory cares are not locked floors filled w/ rows of beds. There is a wide range of cognitive function among the residents living there and the floor is locked, so they don’t walk out the front door, but there are absolutely memory care floors where she can live in her own space.
Anonymous wrote:Assisted living will typically only visit 1-2 times per day for meds administration and limited assist with ADLs.
Dementia advances progressively and soon the things you don’t think are an issue will become issues. She’ll forget how to brush her teeth and wipe herself after toileting. She’ll forget how to safely sit down on and get back up from the toilet. She’ll forget that where she is is home, and she’ll go wandering.
You can do AL temporarily as a bridge to memory care, but only if you are prepared to have a supplementary caregiver visiting to fill the big gaps left by AL staff. Eventually that will be 24/7 caregivers and then it’s a numbers game whether that is more expensive than memory care.
Anonymous wrote:How is her money situation? You could expand the caregiver hours in her home.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why do you think memory care is not a good fit?
OP here. Memory care settings lack privacy and residents with a wide range of behaviors are grouped together in large communal spaces. My grandmother would absolutely hate it. She may not know what day it is or what she ate for breakfast, but she knows that she doesn't want to be forced to sit in a locked room all day with a bunch of other people. She has always been a solitary person, happiest at home with a good book and a dog at her feet. Many memory care settings also seem to have programming designed to keep residents active and engaged. She would hate this too. She just wants to be left in peace. I understand that the activities are meant to enhance quality of life and have benefits, but at 93 years old, the value of this type of therapeutic programming is pretty limited. If I'm wrong about memory care, please correct me. But this is what I deduced by researching programs online.
Anonymous wrote:Why do you think memory care is not a good fit?