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I feel like I’m being taken to the cleaners - paying thousands a month for mom's care. I questioned why so much they say 3 square meals, a bed, 24/7 nurses & CNAs. I get that but seriously?? The total nursing or CNA care she gets per day is maybe 4 hrs per day. Oh wait she gets tv with 10 channels lol. Just really venting here. Anyone feel this way??
On another note I feel super guilty if I don’t visit everyday - it’s getting too much as her 6 week prognosis has turned into 5 months and counting. How do I handle this?

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My mom was in a board and care facility it ran about $3,000 per month. I think they had about 12 beds. She was totally bed bound and she had dementia. She could not walk or stand. She could not feed herself. Prior to placing her in this facility the manager of the facility visited her at home and evaluated her. The fee was based on her needs and services she required.

Prior to that (due to complicated Trust, banking and covid issues) we had her at home with 24/7 care. She was paying $18,000 per month until she ran out of funds and I was paying from my savings.

We had a different 24/7 home care coming when mom was still a little mobile. They refused to come back after it was discovered she had a MASSIVE bed bug infestation. They were a little cheaper than the second agency we hired but not much. Plus I think one of the employees from this agency used my moms address to qualify for a free cell phone.

In the both cases we really could not get her to the doctor because she couldn’t walk or stand. In each situation every time she sneezed or coughed or some small rash, etc (not really emergency room issues) they would call us and say she needs a doctor but hello I don’t have a vehicle that I could get her hospital bed in. In addition to that there is no room in the doctor office for a hospital bed and no place to clean her up if she was soiled. After much fighting with Kaiser I finally got a visiting nurse from Kaiser to come to the board and care to check on her and they called 911 if she needed transport to hospital. She passed away in October 2021. The whole dementia care journey was very difficult .

Good luck. I hope I didn’t ramble to much.
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Just want to say, the OP has not responded to any replies.
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It can cost up to $105,000/ year and more for a skilled nursing home. My mother’s first 6 months in one in NY cost over $44,000 but thankfully her Medicaid transition from in-home care to institutional care came through. A good resource for looking up average care costs of different types in many different US cities is the 2021 Genworth Cost of Care Survey. https://www.genworth.com/aging-and-you/finances/cost-of-care.html
Just type in your city or state to compare costs.
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You are paying people to take care of you mom 24/7. If you don’t feel like the care is up to par, go to the Medicare website where you’ll find how nursing homes are rated. Maybe you’ll find one that’s worth it to you. You’re not just paying for her care, you’re paying for the coordination of care, emergency training and all the rest. Consult an elder law attorney if you are concerned about the finances.

It’s very difficult when someone is expected to die soon and then they rally and hang in there. You’re prepared, and then it’s prolonged. Not knowing how this will play out is very draining. My brother was in a SNF due to brain cancer. He became unresponsive and hospice called me to come—I live over 1500 miles away. We sat around his bed waiting. Then he rallied and lived another three months. It’s definitely limbo land. No one wants to say it, but when is this gonna end? Then the money becomes the target of your frustration. There should be someone to talk with at hospice. Good luck.
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When it comes to building anything on a large scale, it takes investors to get the ball rolling. And their money can be tired up for a couple of years or more. Therefore they wish for a financial benefit for using their money. Otherwise, nothing would be built. That is how your house was built if you live in a subdivision..... hospitals.... shopping centers... etc.

Yes, nursing homes and senior facilities are expensive. Even if such places slashed their prices in half, guess what would happen. Staff would be laid off. Remodeling would be pushed back. Lower quality of food would be used, then..... Their doors would be closed forever.

Then what?

Remember how expensive it was raising children, sending them off to college. Well double or triple that cost for elders. Elders needs more than just one doctor, they need a dozen. A child learns how to do things on their own. An elder stops knowing how to do things on their own [yes, it can vary]. Remember baby proofing? Well, one has to elder proof, as elder fall. The list goes on and on.
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My 95 yo mother has lived with me for the past 5 years and will continue until the end of her life.

Having said that, I have called a couple of nursing homes to inquire about what they offer. The one where I would probably have placed my mother is a small Christian, independent facility on 15 groomed acres that has 50 independent and 30 assisted living residents. They charge flat fees and a private room is $6000/month which includes meals, snacks, etc. etc. They have more staff than the state requires and of course a waiting list.

They don't accept Medicaid or other government funding so when the money runs out, the resident has to relocate to another facility.

The costs that I pay to keep my mother in my home are approximately $1800/month which is what I pay 3 different sitters to give me a break - (sitters aren't cheap either) but that least this way she will not run out of money.

In my home, she gets the very best of care. I cook all of her meals, shower and dress her, keep her hearing aids working, change her clothes every day, keep her skin in excellent shape, etc. I make sure she gets enough fluids and keep a watch on her BMs. She gets weekly physical therapy. We play music and sing in the afternoons a lot and she gets to have interactions with the 4 different ladies who come in for a few hours on different days when I'm out. I don't have to visit anywhere and when she's napping during the day, I can go outside and do whatever.

So either way you go, there is a cost. I'm very tired much of the time depending on how many times she gets up at night. I have lost most of my independence and can't leave my home until one of the sitters is here. Often, I am envious of anyone who doesn't have to be pinned down to the care of an elder, but it's a choice that I have had thrust upon me and I've made the best decision that I can.

IMO there is no right or wrong. As long as our elder LO is properly cared for, it matters little where they are or who is doing the caring...just that they are properly cared for.
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Carolisalone Sep 2022
Bravo, well said...i agree, there is a cost, there is a choice...living my own unexpected journey taking care of my Mom.
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I am late to the party here, but wanted to add two things from our own experience. First, my MIL is in an independent living home. No care is offered, but there are three meals daily, an on-site and expensive hair salon, and then the usual bus service a couple days a week. She pays about $4,200 monthly for a two-bedroom. We saw in the want ads a few weeks ago an advertisement for a new lead chef there for dinner service. It paid between $10-$12 an hour!! Significantly less than just abou ANY other jobs around here. They cannot keep any staff. They do not pay. The company is opening these all around this part of the country. It is nothing but a money funnel for the investors.

second, about 30 years ago my own mother found a wonderful small assisted living arrangement in northern Ohio. A couple of nurses had purchased an old manor home, renovated it, outfitted it for elders, and had about 12 residents at a time. It was wonderful. But then the regulations started. I won’t go into detail, but they closed down after some years because there were ALWAYS new irrational and oppressive rules, constant checks on their facility—far beyond what would be usual and certainly far beyond what made sense. There is really no question that they were run out of business on purpose. They were developing a model for an affordable, basic, safe alternative to the big homes. And were not allowed to do so.

There is big money in older people for these homes. They intend to keep it that way.
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elisny Sep 2022
You have nailed it. Big money and their love of money is engaged in an unconscionable dishonoring and robbing of our elders (and taxpayers), and the regulators oblige.

p.s. Watch for the big money shills on this site and forum. You can identify them by their espoused love of the businesses dishing up "institutionalized neglect."
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I did forget to say in my prior response when I looked at home care 4 hrs a day in Virginia ....it was about $3000 a month and that did not factor in mom can not be left alone when I grocery shop or have time for myself. We decided this $4655 monthly cost was in my best interest to preserve whats left of my back {5 herniated discs, 3 bulging}. At 71 this job full time would be overwhelming. Moms a healthy 89. Now days some elderly live to 100.
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We paid $4500 a month for mom and it was pretty reasonable for central Ohio based on my research. What I liked was the 24/7 supervision, socialization, meals, laundry, housekeeping etc. work out what it would cost to have someone in her home for 24/7 care and you will see what a deal it is!
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Juloo63: Welcome to the forum! Facility care can be expensive and it is worth it, considering the facility's expenses, but please know that your mother is financially responsible for her own care. You didn't indicate wo is "paying thousands a month."
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1) is your mom in Skilled Nursing or Assisted Living?
2) if skilled nursing until her assets are gone will Medicaid kick, so the large monthly pay out
3) if Assisted Living, you need to do more research into the options in your area.
Note: Assisted Living as well as skilled nursing facilities are generally owned by corporations which need to make a profit.
Each facility has their own rates per month per and if that corporation has facilities in different states and even counties the rates will vary. You really need to do your homework and know what the state and county allow for care as well as knowing what each facility offers with amenities. Tv with 10 channels sounds like a master antenna rather than cable or direct tv.
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Lulu376 Sep 2022
Interesting, thank you
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Due diligence in searching for your options is required to make the correct decisions. Assisted Living or Memory Care? There is a difference. Consult an elder law attorney to get the correct responses you need to apply for Medicaid if that is an option but if you don't ask you won't know. You also have to make sure the facilities you are touring or reviewing may or may not honor a Medicaid Spend down.

I reviewed some of the advice that was written for your case and there are a lot of opinions that need to be backed up by hard facts in the content so just be very careful and believe in what the professionals advise .You definitively need to get the facts to make smart choices.

Good Luck as this is a complicated and tedious process.
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Yes ALF and nursing care are exorbitant. In Maryland they said my mom‘s care would be $6200 to $7000 a month, she is independent she still dresses herself. She will be 89 next month and she still showers on her own and gets her breakfast and lunch although she needs to have help with a hot stove. Ridiculous, it was sort of a bait and switch they said she could get in the door for $2300 as an independent person. It’s just too expensive.
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The tv helps pass the time.
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Lulu376 Sep 2022
That could apply to everybody.
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If you visit every day, you have a first-hand view of exactly how many of her needs are neglected in this setting. I doubt she's even getting 4 hours of care per day, and probably a total of 10 minutes of simple personal interaction or attention. But you still need time off! Can someone else visit sometimes? In the end, you have to do what you will feel least guilty about later when she's gone, but within reason for your own health and well-being.
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Momsonlychild Sep 2022
My mom is in a SNF. I wish I could put a video camera in to actually see how much interaction she actually gets. Her monthly cost is around 9K which is average here. We had to do Medicaid and it really upsets me how very few facilities accept Medicaid. Sadly those that do here aren’t always the nicest. But what really matters most is the care they receive.
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Around the Seattle area, I don't know about the nursing homes, but adult family homes start at about $7-8,000 (the low end and thus- you get what you pay for) to the top dollar of $23,000/mo. When I was seeking a place for my mother, (back in 2021), was advised that a 'good' nursing home would run about $13-18,000 a month. I ended up having her placed in a middle of the range afh that was $12,000/mo (and wished I had the finances to place her in a more expensive one where her care would have been far better).

As others mentioned, there are other costs involved besides the immediate ones you see - utilities, taxes, insurance ( a biggie), building interior and exterior maintenance, equipment, laundry, etc etc. All these add up and have to be paid to stay in business.
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I have seen costs here in responses of $6000 to $10,000 dollars for long-term nursing care (that is NOT assisted living). The average cost in my area is $12,500.
I kept my parents in their home as long as I could manage to do so. When caregiving begins to seriously affect your physical and mental health, you must consider other options. Upon researching the options available and consulting with physicians and elder care lawyers, long-term care was the best option for me.
There were programs (before COVID) through the county and neighborhood churches who could lend assistance. Once COVID hit, fear of transmission to my senior parents (88 and 96) was no longer an option. Siblings and other family members were not close enough to help.
One point needs to be made regarding Medicare/Medicaid. Most times Medicare only pays for 30 days of care, medical insurance does not cover long-term care, and the myth that assets have to be expended to a level of $2000 before an individual can qualify for Medicaid is a myth (I discovered this myth from Elder Care lawyers -- worth every penny they charge). The $10,000 to $12,000 (estimated cost) paid to long-term care would have been paid by LONG TERM CARE INSURANCE, if that investment had been made years before (and it was not cheap even then).
In your research check out the Medicare Care Comparison website: (www.medicare.gov/care-compare). This site will give you a report card of facilities near you or the location you are investigating.
The state and federal governments (Medicaid and Medicare) are the ones who will attempt recover costs after your family member passes, not the facility.
SO ..... Vent all you want, it can be healthy, but do your due diligence and investigate ALL options and the cost of ALL options regarding the care of your loved one. You must take care of you before you can take care of your loved one..
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Momsonlychild Sep 2022
Also know with LTC insurance there is a cap on what they will pay. For my MIL they paid up to 300K.
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First let me say venting is good and I know that’s all you were really intending here. Still debate about NH fees aside, there are a couple of things that struck me in your post. First is that it sounds as though you are personally paying for these expenses not Mom. It may just be the way it came across of course and you are paying out of Moms account but if indeed you are personally paying for anything out of your personal funds, don’t do that.

Second “her 6 week prognosis has turned into 5 months and counting” was that prognosis that she would pass or was it that she would be well enough to go back to her previous living situation? Was she placed there for rehab or for comfort care? I ask because the methods of paying for these things differs. If she was sent there for rehab by a hospital or physician Medicare and any supplemental she has should have been picking up the bill for at least the first couple of months providing she was still meeting goals (improving) if not there should have been a discussion about options. If she was placed for comfort care because her life expectancy wasn’t more than 6 weeks you should have been offered Hospice which helps with some of the expenses and the option to stay or go home, maybe even go to a Hospice facility, which is not to say that staying right where she is would be a bad decision but that might open the door for more financial support. Again all based on her income and assets not yours!

As far as feeling guilty if you don’t visit every day, did you visit or see her every day before she went into this facility? If so was that because she needed the care and or checking in on? I totally understand both the desire and need to be there daily at first as she is settling in, especially after an emergency or major illness that has you in emergency mode for any period of time. If indeed the “six week prognosis” was that she would pass, worried it’s going to be any day of course qualifies. Adjustment is really for both of you and from my perspective wanting to be there as much as possible before she passes is as much for you as for her, maybe even more for you. Whatever the original reason you have now moved into a diffrent phase, she is safe and being cared for by professionals, she has not passed or been discharged in the original 6 weeks and there is no real reason for any one person to visit every day anymore, in fact it may not be best for her either depending on her current health issues. Falling into a different pattern, maybe where other people are visiting also and aiming for one visit a day and or getting her involved in activities there at the NH, whatever her “normal” has been most of her life (social butterfly or recluse). Getting back to some semblance of “normal” wether that means seeing her once or twice a week and speaking to her on the phone once or twice a week or something else seems like the best thing for everyone as well as the hardest to me. Most of us, I think, picture passing quietly in our sleep not in a facility somewhere with family around watching us suffer and or die. I have often heard accounts and read them here as well of LO’s who pass as soon as the people that have been parked at their bedside finally go home to sleep, shower or change and wether it’s because the LO is holding on until they leave to spare them, because the LO just doesn’t want anyone to be around or the window can’t open for their spirit to pass through while loved ones are around, it’s not an uncommon thread. I tend to believe that absent an accident the same reasons that we want to simply pass in our sleep are the reasons something in us chooses to pass physically alone and those that know, feel they are loved and not alone are the ones that are surrounded by as much “normalcy” as possible and knowing the people they love aren’t putting aside their lives by visiting when they can out of love not guilt or responsibility. Sounds like your guilt may be fear and letting go benefits both
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If a person has money they should be paying for their care that's what it's for - not inheritances and leave the government and taxpayers holding the bag when it isn't necessary. Yes, the government wastes money but that's no reason for an individual to abuse Medicaid.

I've been in the nursing home and now I'm at home with aides. Home is more expensive and a lot more problems. I may make the decision to back into facility care.
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You Mom would have to pay thousands these days, just for renting an apartment, with no additional services. Nursing home care requires skilled staff and 24/7 care. It's expensive no matter where you go. If your mother runs out of money, she can go on Medicaid, which pays for nursing home care. If she has the money, remember that it's her money, and that it's a good use of her money for her to be in a quality nursing home. Visit as often as you can, but please don't feel guilty if you can't visit every day. She is in a nursing home to get good care, and you also are entitled to get breaks from caregiving. Don't let yourself get burned out. Also take care of your own health and life.
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OP hasn't been back, but I'm still wondering why she feels SHE is being taken to the cleaner. Mom should be paying, and when her money runs out, Medicaid pays.
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dlwyma Sep 2022
I will soon be at the point of getting mom signed up for Medicaid. Right now she is in a Memory care facility that is private pay-there is a skilled Nursing home attached to the memory care facility. Just not sure how this will work and how long does it take to get medicaid? She can only have 2K in a bank account when we apply, I have a few months but have been worried about for over a year. Appreciate any tips and info
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I agree....In my case my mother is in an assisted living facility. They are all a racket. I also know that no matter how expensive they may be per month, many of them are still run on a shoe string budget.

I would try to let the guilt go if unable to go 'every day' (wow, that is a lot) Maybe you could carve out a period of time a few times a week if that works better. It doesn't have to be the same days per week. Establish those boundaries for yourself.
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elisny, prisons? Dumping? Try not to paint all nursing homes and senior facilities with the same brush. In my area, we have over a dozen of senior facilities/nursing homes to choose from, and from what I have seen and heard, they are excellent.

My Mom was in one of the nursing home as it now took a village to care for her. My Dad choose a very nice senior facility and he was happy as a clam there, and had wished he would have moved sooner. Both were in their late 90's, and I was a senior citizen myself.

When it comes to our parent's health conditions, we need to be on top of things. I know it can be difficult if one doesn't live in the same area. Thus, we cannot blame a nursing home if a new resident comes in with an issue that is not on paper, and not readily noticeable to the staff. Especially if the resident has Alzheimer's/Dementia.
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Yes the cost is outrageous and you are overpaying but that is how our system works. It wants all your money and you to be broke before they will help.
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schrist586 Sep 2022
Here the monthly cost for a semi-private room is about $6000 per month. Could your loved one qualify for Medicaid? If yes, then the facility receives their Social Security check and the patient gets to keep $60 per month, in full payment of costs. At least, that’s how it is in Texas. The facility should have a Medicare/Medicaid specialist and can apply for Medicaid for you.
I would advise cutting back your visits to 2 or 3 times a week at most, so your LO has a chance to better acclimate to their new circumstances and routine, and to save your own sanity.
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I decided to take care of my dad in my home myself because they told me it would be $10,000 a month to put him in memory care. We did just fine with the help of respite care coming in to help a few times a week. This was a few years back, I can only imagine how much they charge now. It was sooo much less expensive and Medicare paid for a PT and OT to visit when he needed some help in that department. I know everyone is not able to do this but it was a better choice for him because he felt secure being with me, and his whole estate was not eaten up and he had something to leave behind.
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BurntCaregiver Sep 2022
You know, it makes me sick what they get away with. If a family member charges $10,000 a month for providing 24/7 care (which is usually a hundred times better than what someone gets in a facility) is unacceptable. Then when the cash and assets run out Medicaid will pay will never happen.
Yet if it's a nursing home or memory care, hand it right over.
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I would estimate Nursing Home costs at about $9000 a month. Hired care in the home might cost at least as much plus the ongoing expense of maintaining the home and property.

Nursing Homes and Rehab facilities mau have staff on duty 24/7, but that staff is thinly spread among residents. Between COVID and low wages, staffing care facilities is especially low right now.

You may have to live with the guilt of not visiting every day. That seems like a lot.
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I agree with you. Lots of people will make excuses for the insane cost of "institutionalized neglect." People don't want to feel guilty about dumping their loved ones in these prisons. People who claim the facilities are good either have a very unique situation (1 in 1000) or haven't spent enough time in the facility -- like showing up randomly any time night or day and spending hours observing.

I spent more than 5 years (daily, on average 8 hours/day - until her departure in June of this year, 2022) caring for my severely limited mother in a nursing home of a self-proclaimed "high end" continuing care retirement community where my mother had a Life Care contract (search for Vi Living). My mother was grossly neglected before I left my career and home and moved 3500 miles to care for her after I visited and found so many things wrong. For example #1 (of many I could share): When I was there to visit before I moved there, I asked the nurse what was going on with my mother's hearing, because I noticed she could not hear me unless I was in front of her. The nurse was unaware of any issue. The doctor stood 18 inches in front of my mother and asked if she could hear him. I took my mother to an ENT doctor and he removed at least 1/2" of wax out of each of her ears. Then she could hear fine. Of course, the facility did nothing to educate the staff or inform them that any unresponsiveness was due to her hearing, not her cognition. For example #2: A few months after I went back home to put my life in order so I could move, my mother started talking about Larry, who she was going to marry, who she was going to take trips with, etc. All my siblings heard about Larry - who was an imaginary friend or a spirit guide. Did the facility have any awareness: No. My mother was so emotionally and psychosocially neglected, she had to conjure up a companion. Once I arrived, Larry was never spoken of again.

BTW: In addition to the hundreds of thousands of dollars paid for the Life Care Contract (effectively a long-term care policy, for Life, but limited to one facility - the community's), my mother paid approximately $10,000 a month for a private room ($4500/month for the 1st year and half in a semi-private room, while she was on the waiting list for a private room).

I advise staying away from nursing homes whenever possible. Metaphorically they are warehouses for the elderly, bad zoos, prisons, or the like. Owners, management, and most staff treat residents as 3rd class citizens who have few rights. Most of the public shares that perspective. Yet, in fact, the resident's space is their HOME. They are entitled to the basic rights of every other citizen in their home.

There are extensive laws to protect residents (42 CFR §483) -- but NOBODY knows them or seriously enforces them.

The system is horrific, but in this country money talks so the compassionless profiteers get away with it.

Within the next few months I intend to have a website built -- adding as I have time -- excerpts from "our" story.
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BurntCaregiver Sep 2022
No one is saying nursing homes are great places. No one is saying that there isn't poor care, disgusting food, sub-par living conditions and neglect. No one is saying they don't pull underhanded, sheisty, and often illegal practices when it comes to their business office. No one is saying that they do not commit financial elder abuse.

Everyone already knows this.

You were fortunate enough to be able to quit your job and relocate to take care of your mother. Most people can't do that.
For most people a nursing home is the only option because they cannot afford round-the-clock homecare (which Medicaid does not pay for and almost everyone ends up on Medicaid if they live long enugh). They don't have the resources to make mom or dad their life 24/7. Many didn't have wonderful parents who deserve an adult child to ever consider that.
Everyone has a nursing home horror story. Everyone pretty much knows avoiding a nursing home is best. Every person in a nursing home needs someone on the outside advocating for them and making sure they're decently cared for.
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It is simply ridiculous that families must make the choice of keeping someone at home because they don’t want to see their LO lose their entire life savings to a nursing home. I know of a person who made the decision to keep a VERY advanced ALZ parent at home with a part time aid because they also live in the house and have nowhere to go if it had to be sold. She works full time and her parent really needs full time around the clock care, but 4 hours a day is all she can afford. So she leaves for work at 8am and the aid comes from 11-3 and then a neighbor “keeps eyes on the house” until she gets home at 6:00. It’s a recipe for disaster but it’s what she is willing to do to keep the house. It is her inheritance and she has counted on it her entire life, not to mention the house has been in the family for three generations. Our health care system is a mess.
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BurntCaregiver Sep 2022
Caregiverstress,

No, it's nor necessarily a recipe for disaster. If she has someone looking after her whrn the aide isn't there, she may be fine.
I had a client who I worked for a few hours a day, then her neighbor/friend would stop in for a couple of hours, the client would take a nap, and then her son is home from work.
She had dementia but didn't wander. She didn't try to cook or do anything. She sat in her chair and watched game shows.
An over zealous fanatic social worker from APS had her put into memory care against her will and her family's. She got placed because the social worker (and mind they too get "incentives" and "gratuity" when someone gets placed), brought in people to inspect the home and they deemed that it would need somewhere around $100,000 in renovations to make it "safe" for my client. It was an apartment on the fist floor, her son lived in the second floor. She did fine with her walker which fit in the bathroom. So the choice was pull all the equity out of her house and do the renovations and get 24-hour care so she could stay home for a little while until the money runs out, or placement and a nursing home will take the money then get her on Medicaid. They had no choice. The poor woman was miserable in the memory care facility and basically cried and starved herself to death.
There's nothing wrong with keeping a person at home for the money. They're not going to get better care in a facility.
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I chose to keep my bride of 32 years, at home. She requires 24/7 companions/caregivers. This allows me time to sleep without interruption and time to get out during the day for my own health and well-being. I’m paying $13k a month. If I move her to a care facility it goes up to $19k a month because I need someone to be with her every minute. Facilities do not provide 24/7 care companions. You have to bring in someone for that.
Yes, this is expensive, but if your mom has only a few months remaining, I pray you have the resources to provide what she needs.
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Whatever the cost per month, divide it by 720. Compare that to the going hourly rate in your area for NON licensed home-care aides.
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BurntCaregiver Sep 2022
I don't know if you're aware of this or not, but homecare aides are not licensed. Homecare agencies are but their licensing isn't what you might think. They also do not train their caregivers and the "office" offers no support to the aide in a client's home. I worked for homecare agencies for a long time then went private pay only. All any of them ever offered me way 25% of what they collected for my service. That's all they do for aide staff. Private duty aides collect 100% of what's collected for their service. This is why there's such a shortage of aide staff in nursing homes and care agencies today. Everyone wised up and went private.
I always tell people to hire private aides. The experienced ones like me who come with sterling references don't work for the crap pay an agency offers. Yet, hiring a private pay caregiver will cost you a lot less than using an agency. Your loved one will get better care too.
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