Anonymous wrote:I think someone in her early seventies who is in good health is not a good candidate for a continuing care community yet. Although the advertising brochures show very youthful looking old people as residents, the reality often is that most of the residents are physically and/or mentally challenged. A relative of mine moved into an independent living apt in a continuing care community as a very peppy 85 year old and still felt that many of the residents had given up on life.
Anonymous wrote:If your mom is of the mindset that she should move into a senior community so she has the support of snd wgen she needs it, that’s really terrific and might save you so much potential stress down the road.
It sounds like she is very independent so wouldn’t be a candidate for assisted living, but she might be a good candidate for independent living, ideally part of a CCRC (Continuing Care Retirement Community). Tgesecounities allow people to age in place, as they have independent living, assisted living, memory care, nursing care and rehab all on one campus. However, it is important to find a community where the independent living residents are active and on the younger side, like your mom.
It might still be early for all of this. You can keep an eye out for a CCRC that might fit the bill when your mom is a bit older, and pursue a retirement community like Leisure World instead. The benefit to this would be social interaction and plenty of activities - but of course it all depends on your mom’s interests, personality and preferences.
It might be worth touring some of these places with your mom. If she prefers to live in an apartment that’s not part of a senior community, it sounds like she’s more than capable of
that. But her instinct to plan for the future is an excellent one.
Anonymous wrote:If your mom is of the mindset that she should move into a senior community so she has the support of snd wgen she needs it, that’s really terrific and might save you so much potential stress down the road.
It sounds like she is very independent so wouldn’t be a candidate for assisted living, but she might be a good candidate for independent living, ideally part of a CCRC (Continuing Care Retirement Community). Tgesecounities allow people to age in place, as they have independent living, assisted living, memory care, nursing care and rehab all on one campus. However, it is important to find a community where the independent living residents are active and on the younger side, like your mom.
It might still be early for all of this. You can keep an eye out for a CCRC that might fit the bill when your mom is a bit older, and pursue a retirement community like Leisure World instead. The benefit to this would be social interaction and plenty of activities - but of course it all depends on your mom’s interests, personality and preferences.
It might be worth touring some of these places with your mom. If she prefers to live in an apartment that’s not part of a senior community, it sounds like she’s more than capable of
that. But her instinct to plan for the future is an excellent one.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If it's a multi-step community she is onsite and more easily can move from independent living to assisted to nursing care when the time comes. Living in a community of fellow seniors so a social setting that may work for her. No landscaping or house upkeep. Less reliance on you.
I guess I just don't see the difference from living in an apartment, with no landscaping or upkeep, and with lots of on-site ammeneties like grocery, dry-cleaner, concierge, security and maintenace staff... if she may not need that level of nursing care someday, is it worth the extra cost to start off in a community? I do agree that the social aspect would be nice, especially since she'd be fully relocating from out of the area.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If it's a multi-step community she is onsite and more easily can move from independent living to assisted to nursing care when the time comes. Living in a community of fellow seniors so a social setting that may work for her. No landscaping or house upkeep. Less reliance on you.
I guess I just don't see the difference from living in an apartment, with no landscaping or upkeep, and with lots of on-site ammeneties like grocery, dry-cleaner, concierge, security and maintenace staff... if she may not need that level of nursing care someday, is it worth the extra cost to start off in a community? I do agree that the social aspect would be nice, especially since she'd be fully relocating from out of the area.
Anonymous wrote:If it's a multi-step community she is onsite and more easily can move from independent living to assisted to nursing care when the time comes. Living in a community of fellow seniors so a social setting that may work for her. No landscaping or house upkeep. Less reliance on you.