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My mother is 62, and unfortunately due to her exit seeking behavior she is not a candidate for AL. I have found a MC facility that accepts Medicaid and has an available bed.
Her MLTC case manger, her social worker, and medical team have been trying to get me to rethink MC given her age she is 65 and how active she is they feel memory care will limit her quality of life since her needs can be met in the community. Issue is Medicaid is being stingy with homecare hours, and it legit is not safe for her to be alone.
I feel as if people are making me out to be a monster. I am an only child and work sometimes upwards of 80 hour weeks. I cannot focus on work and my mother. I am a chemical engineer at my age requesting a lighter work load is career suicide.
Any suggestions as to what I should do? Should I follow medical advise and waif to place my mom?

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Fact: I worked in a Memory Care Assisted Living facility and we had 2 women in their late 50s or early 60s with dementia living there. Their husbands worked full time and were unable to care for them at home, period. The women did FINE in Memory Care, had friends and socialized.

Dementia is a lose lose situation for all concerned. You cannot care for mother at home nor is it safe. The social service people are liars and not living the nightmare THEMSELVES. Just giving false promises of More Help At Home and yada yada. What do YOU do when The Help doesn't show up last minute? Or mom is having a blowout at 2am when you should be sleeping? Or she's up wandering and trying to get out of the house or cook at 3am?

Place your mother. Its the best of a bad situation, which is all you can expect with dementia. You'll be sad, she'll be sad, and everyone will cry. But she will be safe and fed and accounted for 24/7. You can visit her to your hearts content and keep her stocked up on her favorite snacks and pretty blouses.

Don't torture yourself over making the only wise decision you CAN make here. I'm sorry you, me, and millions of others are or were or will be faced with such dreadful decisions now and in the future. I hate dementia with every ounce of my being.
Helpful Answer (23)
Reply to lealonnie1
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"...her needs can be met in the community."

and by community, they mean you — and in reality, only you.

Tell them no and just keep saying no.

Also, how is her MC going to be paid for? Not by you, I hope? Hopefully Medicaid will be paying for it? If I were in your shoes I'd place her asap so that you can resume your life and not have to worry about where your Mom is and what she's doing, or if the Medicaid in-home aids showed up, etc.
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Reply to Geaton777
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You need to lay down the law. You have a demanding career, and granted your Mom is young, but the reality is she has some form of brain injury with resulting dementia. She is not wealthy, so her choices are limited. She is younger than most, but it happens to all ages.

Your mission is to get her where she needs to be, to be safe. Otherwise the State does it. You are young and frustrated with the system. Her medical team is playing you like a fiddle. You have various medical "professionals" giving you WEAK advice. They feel "memory care will limit her quality of life"...yet what about YOURS? How has "the Community" helped you so far? Their priority should be her safety! You already found a place you like available, and they have the nerve to attempt to stall her placement? What are they thinking?

You have no other help or siblings, so time to get firm about placement. Repeat these 2 facts as needed:
1. She is not safe alone at home, period.
2. You cannot be her 24/7 caregiver with your demanding job.

You are smart enough to know this is not a pleasant situation, but is required for Mom's safety. You are not a monster, and resent the insinuation that you are. You did not cause Mom's decline. What is so damn bad about placing Mom where she will have 24/7 care, be fed, kept clean and safe? She will be around other people, have activities, socialize, and her wandering behavior be prevented. You can advocate for her, instead of worry and stress out constantly.

The reality is caregiving your "active" Mom is a 24/7 job. She will only get worse. Wandering is extremely dangerous, and they all know it. Memory Care is not an insane asylum, it is a controlled care situation. She will be kept safe from wandering the streets, possibly getting abducted, or hit by a car. I've read numerous stories here, such as elder Mom was found a mile away on a winter night in their nightgown, shivering with hypothermia. You are calling police when you find her missing, you cannot concentrate on your living you need to earn, the stress is incredible. All these people want to do is guilt you with her caregiving and move on! It annoys me they all know better.

Don't buy the "her quality of life will suffer" speech. What about your quality of life? You are not placing Mom in prison. Get your argument ready, and stick to it. Nobody wins with dementia. Not your fault whatsoever. The goal is to keep Mom safe, or she won't have any quality of life!

Let them know you are also a professional in your field, and you aren't allowing them to guilt you or manipulate you into not placing your Mom. You expect them to do their jobs and assist with the Medicaid paperwork. Call a meeting to save time. You aren't going to allow further stalling on her placement.

You will be her #1 advocate, not her stressed out personal caregiver. Don't let their emotional blackmail interfere with this mission. YOU GOT THIS.
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Reply to Dawn88
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The only way for mom’s needs to be met in the community is for you to manage the whole thing and sacrifice your career, not to mention yourself. Mom will get worse, not better. She needs memory care now. They’ll find plenty of activities for her to do, and she’ll be safe there. Go for it!
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Reply to Fawnby
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I would pick the option that is safest for my mom. Your mom will be safe in a MC facility. And, although she is active now, I am not sure that this should be your top consideration. She has a disease that will, regrettably, only continue to rob her of her bodily faculties. There is nothing you can do to turn back that cruel clock. And there is no guarantee that if you are her sole caregiver you will have the time and energy to continue to keep her active while working full time and ensuring that all her basic care needs are met.

And, you do also have to be mindful of your present and your future. The only way you could realistically provide your mom with the case she needs would likely be to quit your job. Without a job, how would you pay for your expenses, your healthcare, and your retirement? Sacrificing those things won't reverse the progression of your mom's disease.

Care teams will rarely prioritize caregiver well-being. You need to prioritize it in a way that respects your needs and your mom's. You could, for example, place her in a MC facility where she will likely be safer than unsupervised at home and visit her as often as you can and spend as much time as you can with her working on preserving her activity level.

Good luck!
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Reply to doncet72
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Grab that bed while it’s available!
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Reply to anonymous144448
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Just my opinion, I would place her in MC as soon as possible. My sister has Lewy Body and has been in MC for 2 years now. She still tries to leave the facility. When I visit, she says we have to "go now"! She's up all night wandering. She has hallucinations and delusions. I know she's well cared for in MC, and the staff does a good job. It was the right decision for my sister and me. Best wishes to you.
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Reply to roadtrip54
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Tell them that she is in the best place for her needs, end of story. You tell them to not "ask" again because you are certain that other options are not in the best interest of your mother.

Do not let them make you believe community mediciad is going to provide the care your mother needs. You absolutely can not rely on community mediciad in this situation. There are too many call outs or no shows due to short staffing and crap pay.
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Reply to AMZebbC
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LoopyLoo Dec 13, 2024
She is absolutely NOT in the best place if she is a flight risk. Don’t discourage a MC you’ve never seen.
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Yes, MC is the only option. It's not a 'maybe?' situation. 

A friend of mine just went through this with her mother. Mother lived alone, kept insisting she was fine and would not let any sitter or hired caregiver in her house. Children could not care for her 24/7 as they all have younger children. That, and she was slapping her kids, the cops, anyone who tried to help her. Was giving her money away to a leech boyfriend. Had to stop driving because she smashed her car into a light pole. Scariest part was she'd walk around her neighborhood in 90-degree heat, forget where she was, and walk up a busy street. She got into several strangers' cars (with lots of cash in her pockets) and thankfully they were all decent people who took her to the ER. 

After almost 2 years of this, her children got her into AL. It did not go well. AL could not make her stay in the building during the day. All they could do was call her daughter and tell her mom's on the run again. They hired a sitter and mom would yell and hit them. That, and daily sitters would cost $16,000 A MONTH! 

Mom is now in MC. She doesn't like it, but it is a great place, very clean, with attentive staff and lots of activities. She's safe from wandering and MC has doctors on staff to help with her severe anxiety. This has helped tremendously and stopped the violent behavior. Her children can relax a little knowing she's well cared for and safe.
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Reply to LoopyLoo
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i hate to say this but what about your quality of life? This could go on for twenty years and this will destroy your life. Place her in MC and be grateful for the opening.
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Reply to Hothouseflower
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