Anonymous wrote:OP, not the answer you're looking for but .. I would have a pharmacist weigh in on the timing/dosage/need for every medication. A second opinion.
To often it is *only* the need for medicaion management that sends elders to assisted living. Often they can do everything else for themselves
There may ba some medications that could be eliminated if the benefit is not as great as the risk to them when the RX is not taken properly. Example: high cholesterol medication.
This is really interesting, and I think very accurate. My elderly mom lives with us and is now at 85 showing the first signs of real cognitive decline. However, I had to take over her medication management about a year ago as she was losing track of what she was taking, and skipping doses etc. Now it's to the point where I hold all her meds (I have health care POA as well as legal POA) and give them to her am and pm, as well review with her (using a sheet of paper listing all meds) what each med is for. I use a weekly pill sorter so each day is marked clearly am/pm. She's in pretty good health, but takes meds for cholesterol, blood pressure, depression and must take regularly and at the correct dosage. I can't envision her being able to use any kind of device, even with the pill box and list of meds I use with her.