Anonymous wrote:PP: here’s what the elderly parents should NOT do:
“Wing it” or “decide when that time comes”… to plan/move/make decisions/have an Advanced Medical Directive/Durable Power of Attorney/DNR order/Will/Trust/Burial/Funeral Plans etc. Claim repeatedly that these are uncomfortable conversations and…
Assume your adult DC will “be able to help” (with transportation, med reminders, filing your taxes, do your banking, general house maintenance, etc.) and therefore defer critical decisions
Dismiss any and all suggestions to de-clutter
Make grand pronouncements that you will never leave current home, or ask your adult DC to pledge NEVER to “put you away”
Assume that you can simply “age in place” without making ANY changes or adjustments
Bank 100k and earmark this for “elder care” with the idea that you’ll hire an aide to come over for a couple of hours every once in a while to help you with…stuff.
Anonymous wrote:Goal would be to go to a primary care doctor who can outline next steps; maybe a referral to neurologist for further testing, perhaps a diagnosis (could be general like cognitive decline). Maybe a social worker gets involved if nothing else but to discuss available resources like adult day care, transportation services, home health aide visits or plan, etc.
A general plan should be outlined: are they going to stay in current home? If so, how practical and most importantly, safe is their residence? How are medicines managed? Home delivery? Very important to critical that meds - all-even OTC are supervised.
Are doorways wide enough to get a walker or wheelchair through? Where are primary bedrooms?
How will home maintenance be handled? Lawn care?
Is there a DNR in place? If so, this must be out and visible -make copies and distribute. Also discuss power of attorney. Who can write checks, pay bills if one partner is hospitalized or unable to do so?
Plan to have a responsible adult accompany the patients to any doctor appointments. This person will take notes, clarify, ask questions.
OP Here: These will be very helpful to ask the current caregiver, thanks. It seemed like they were already doing a lot of this (one-story house, yard service,medication management with pill boxes, wills/power of attorney is all up to date, they have a joint account to pay bills) - but since they are also of advanced age - so how much they can handle is also a concern.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The next step is more hired help, and figuring out an eventual move.
OP here: As you can imagine they don't a lot of resources and live in an early with limit support options. While we were visiting they did mention they had reached out the council on aging -which could assist with meals on wheels, driving to appointments etc. But day-to-day care seems more relevant at this point. I guess part of my question should have been - do they need the primary care physician to note these declines in order to gain access to a memory care facility?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The next step is more hired help, and figuring out an eventual move.
OP here: As you can imagine they don't a lot of resources and live in an early with limit support options. While we were visiting they did mention they had reached out the council on aging -which could assist with meals on wheels, driving to appointments etc. But day-to-day care seems more relevant at this point. I guess part of my question should have been - do they need the primary care physician to note these declines in order to gain access to a memory care facility?
It probably doesn't matter too much if they can't afford it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The next step is more hired help, and figuring out an eventual move.
OP here: As you can imagine they don't a lot of resources and live in an early with limit support options. While we were visiting they did mention they had reached out the council on aging -which could assist with meals on wheels, driving to appointments etc. But day-to-day care seems more relevant at this point. I guess part of my question should have been - do they need the primary care physician to note these declines in order to gain access to a memory care facility?
Anonymous wrote:The next step is more hired help, and figuring out an eventual move.