So I've come a long way since last I posted: 1) hired an elder law attorney to handle dad's finances and options for moving out of his apartment to AL, and 2) started the process of looking at Assisted Living Facilities. The law firm recommended 3 that would be in line with dad's finances of SSA/VA benefits. The problem is I've visited 2 of them and find them so darn depressing that I cannot even picture my father living there. They were both clean but both reminded me of an institution. The second one I visitied I noticed all the residents seemed "out of it" or grumpy. I have one more to go but I am already disheartened that my dad will absolutely hate being in one of these places.
And what is with the infantilizing residents with all the childish games/activities? My dad is a total introvert so forget about engaging in any of that stuff - but can't say I would blame him. Also, he is of completely sound mind which really makes me wonder how he would do in an ALF.
Just venting and wondering if anybody thought the same about these places? It just seems to me that these places are god's (or whatever) waiting room. Thanks for the mini-rant.
Where she's at now is somewhat depressing. And she hasn't made much of an effort to join in and make friends (with the exception of bingo and meals). She calls them "those old strangers". She isn't happy there. So, did I make a bad decision? I don't think so. She has never been happy. She's sweet and I love her with all my heart, but this is where she belongs.
She'll be 98 next week. When I asked what she wanted for her birthday, she said, "A home and a husband." I'm afraid that's a request I can't fulfill. Funny thing though, when she had a home and a loving husband four years ago, she just wanted to die.
There are services out there that will help you find a place (AgingCare has told me I cannot list the one I used directly), they are out there. Search the internet.
And yes, if you choose to see it that way, Assisted Living can be viewed as "God's waiting room". However the right one can be really a blessing for your loved one. Ours was for Mother, and they had her involved right away, even though she said No at first. The important thing here is keeping our loved ones involved and around others like themselves. Isolation is a real problem for our elderly. Good luck the right place is out there waiting for your Dad.
I live not far from one, EMSis there often, and the talk from some who live there and take public transit are those that have died or those trying to move out while still alive.
In the meantime, there was an opinion piece in the New York Times this past week, "How Not to Grow Old in America," which I found to be an interesting read:
https://www.nytimes.com/2019/08/29/opinion/sunday/dementia-assisted-living.html
Thanks again.
I had a dear family friend, the sweetest woman. When she was quite elderly, she lived alone in a tiny, barely heated old house. She only had one friend, my mom. She had severe scoliosis and could barely walk. There's no telling how or what she got to eat. It was heartbreaking to see her live that way. Finally, her daughter moved her to a nursing home.
My sister and I went to visit her, with my sister barely managing to hold herself together to see our friend in a nursing home. I admit I hated to see her in the *cue spooky music* nursing home. But then I noticed she'd gained weight, had good color in her face, had good food to eat, had a warm room and a comfortable bed, and people around to support this bright, sweet woman. She's gone now, but at least in the end she didn't die alone.
Yeah, not all AL/nursing homes are quality, but sometimes being in a facility is so much better than the alternative.
The descriptions you give make it sound more like you are in a MC place. Mom's facility is IL/AL/MC and everyone I have seen/met in the IL/AL sections are mobile (granted some need assistance) and still cognizant, active, going out, participating in activities not geared for grammar school, etc. Even some of those who have moved into mom's MC unit are still capable of some interaction at a higher level - it won't last, but that's why they are in MC.
You might be better off finding an IL and hiring aides to help with what you need help with (but it still comes down to the choice of place - just because a place is 'ranked' better, who knows where the ranking came from or when it was done!) Do your research and find a place more acceptable to your needs instead of whining and moaning about your situation.
If you are so wonderful and capable, FIND ANOTHER PLACE AND MOVE instead of lambasting all AL (and then demanding others place their LO in one when they are having difficulty - nothing like flip-flopping!!!)
Another suggestion - find a small accessible home and hire help. You sound capable enough that you only need some physical help, not 24/7. Remember also that AL is for anyone who can afford it. Not everyone who moves in will be an Einstein, just average people. It sounds like your place is over-rated.
Wow, you bring up a very important point! I remember almost twenty years ago when my dear aunt, older sister of my mom, was having difficulty living in her own apartment alone. I reminded her of the option to have someone come stay with her at night as that was her difficult time and she had a two bedroom apartment she had lived in for years alone. She wanted no part of that. After a few bouts with needing the fire department to come help her get up as she was falling, one time she ended up in the hospital and then needed to go to a rehab place.
I remember that day touring the local rehap place, nursing home, you name it place. It was TERRIBLE! We were there on Father's Day, believe it or not. My special needs daughter still quite young, was along. I remember my horror when I saw a young person on a gurny getting his weekly bath there. I could not imagine my daughter nor my dear aunt having to be there and told my mom that it was a terrible place I wouldn't wish on anyone but my worst enemy if even them!
So I was on a mission to find a better place for my aunt and found a local assisted living facility. I viewed it and it seemed pretty nice to me. Well, after getting my aunt in there, she didn't like it and wanted to be back in her own apartment. Since I had my daughter and husband, I could not volunteer to stay with her in her beloved apartment and no other family volunteered to do so either as perhaps they could not realistically do that either. Not happily, my aunt moved to the nice local assisted living facility. As I recall, my daughter was in kindergarten or first grade. We would always go visit my aunt on Sunday late in the afternoon. But my aunt was not happy with us. She wanted us to come earlier and better yet, take her out of there. My aunt was not married and had no children although she was an excellent school teacher for many many years.
There really was not a good solution to help my beloved aunt. At the time, my husband had lost his job and I had just found a full time job myself to help us get by difficult times. So I was in no means to have my beloved aunt come live in our home. My husband reminded me that if she was falling where she had lived for about thirty years, she was bound to fall in our home if unassisted alone and we were not prepared to have that happen. I suppose he was correct although at the time I felt bady saying the nice assisted living place near us was much better of her options.
My dear aunt moved there and didn't like it at all, but for all including herself, it was the very best place for her. Yes, it was costly. Yes, she resented being there. But it allowed her to have a few more decent years in my opinion. Now my own mom talks about going there. Unfortunately, she is much worse off than how my aunt ever was so if she could even go there, it would be on the not so pretty bottom floor I visited once. I doubt anyone would desire to be there and my aunt never ended up down there.
I have no real answers on a good situation for our loved ones. It is difficult to deal with changes for all of us. What I have learned is that when I cannot live here in my home and my daughter and husband are not able to help me do that either, we all might need to move there. Knowing what I know now, I do not think it will seem like such a bad place to me like it was to my aunt. I can only wish for that and for all of us here to make the most of what we have each day.
But everyone of the places were shameful. My father was in a so called Dementia Care facility. Some of the staff never heard of dementia let alone be trained. And he paid out pocket for his little awful, depressing room!!!!
Just wanted to add that I would never Have placed him there. Wanted to keep him in his home and take care of him. My sister had POA. Put him there while I was at work. Then threw the key away. Sorry to say he fell three times that I know. Broke his neck in three places, told them but no incident report was done. Had surgery and died in that horrid place. Begged to take him home and she said No.
Prayers and blessings to you in your decisions.
Check out https://dailycaring.com/senior-housing-options-overview/ for the various options in "senior" living.
The ones you say are "...way out of budget. $135K entrance fee; $8K/month..." are 'Continuing Care Retirement Community' residences. The AL places mom used to check out in her area were mostly this type. I often wondered why the big up front cost when none of it is used for the huge monthly fee! I still don't know what they do with that money, but would NEVER consider one of them. Sure, they plan to keep you to the end (no need to move facility when moving to MC and/or NH), but still!!! Many ALs has a MC wing, so that eliminates moving to a new facility.
Regular AL should not have that kind of fee, just a monthly fee. They may require a deposit, it varies from one place to another. The costs vary as do the services included. We looked into 3 places. One was a no go from the first viewing. The first place we looked at was newly opened and nice, but quite a bit more expensive and farther for me to travel to (close to YB's place, but he is/was working still and I handle/manage most everything, so between cost and convenience for me, I was not in favor of that place.) The place we decided on is about 10-15 minutes for me and after 2.5+ years is STILL less per month (~8K) than that first place was (that also was the cost of a shared space at that time, likely more $ now, 2 BR with shared bath, no way mom would like that!) The place we selected wasn't even open yet (old facility was torn down and rebuilt), so we couldn't "view" it, but we're happy with the place. OB is in the south and looked at a place there (ours is non-profit, his was for profit) and he questioned why so expensive here when his was only 3k/m for MC. I looked into it - that was the base price only and everything else was ala carte (meals, laundry, cleaning, etc.), plus the reviews I read were pretty negative.
Being in NJ, I suspect your AL costs will be a bit more than here in the NE (one web site shows it to be about $400/m more.) Some people prefer the Residential Care Homes, smaller home-like places which they say are sometimes less expensive than traditional ALs. I suspect facilities that have IL, AL and MC are subsidized a bit by having the levels of care in one place. VA facilities may be more like NHs, thus maybe not so homey or hotel-like, but should be less expensive.
If his income is limited and he has no assets, is it possible for him to qualify for Medicaid and have in-home services instead of moving (I have read this is an option, staying in the home and getting care rather than going to a Medicaid facility.) Is he a renter or does he own his own place? If he owns a home and can sell it, the proceeds can be used to private pay until the funds are used up, then he might qualify for Medicaid (choose the place wisely then, so to make the transition easier.)
If it has to be a facility, I would choose between AL and Residential Care home.
Check this site:
https://www.assistedlivingfacilities.org/directory/nj/
This page shows average cost of AL for the surrounding states.
I plugged in zip for your location, selected "Standard" and Continue. While this brings you to a page to request help, don't enter anything! Below that is a link to show you the facilities. Click that link and it lists 100 places within 12 miles. I would start by checking the web sites and calling before visiting 100 places! Eliminate those that are too expensive right away! Find the ones he might be able to afford and check the website carefully. Take notes, call and ask many questions, THEN narrow it down and visit some of the places.
PS - Even before checking/clicking the places listed, they each have a list of services - those in green are available and I see some Medicaid ones.
PPS It appears this site is geared to helping you find a place - I wouldn't enter any info into the panels offered, just check what is offered, check the places.
Start with alleviating some of your stress/running around. You say "Now I pitch in with shopping, bill paying, running errands, but it's difficult as he does not live around the corner from me..." While working, this will take a toll on you!
* Have his bills sent to you (or a PO Box.) Most places will change billing address without providing any kind of POA. They don't care where the bills go, so long as they get paid!
* Hopefully you have POA so you can access his assets. Technically if you are using his SS (only source of income) you should apply to be his rep payee. It requires making an appointment with a local SS office and filing and reporting yearly how the funds are used (no charge to do this and funds are used only for his benefit.) Once approved, they send the first payment as a check to you - you will need to set up a special rep payee account for that which only you can access and then can request electronic deposits. From there, you can set up all the accounts to be paid and when the bills arrive, schedule payments from the bill payer system. This is nice because you only have to set them up once and then just schedule payments - no more running to PO for stamps!
* For shopping and errands, try to consolidate them as best you can. There will always be times when an additional trip out is needed, but if you plan ahead, it saves time and gas money! I do this for myself, whenever possible.
The simple answer to your primary question is no, they are not all the same. There are those for profit, non-profit, VA, etc. Accommodations and services as well as cost and the residents can vary considerably and certainly will from one area of the country to another, sometimes even within a state. His limited income is likely limiting the choices, but although "The law firm recommended 3 that would be in line with dad's finances of SSA/VA benefits.", you can look around to see if there are others. As many have indicated, there are nice places and there are crappy ones. You might even want to recheck the ones you did already, as maybe it was an "off" day. Hopefully you know how much the SS/VA total is, so that you can check with prices on other places. The ones they suggested might have some kickback...
Mom's place is a combination IL/AL/MC and one has to go through the reception/dining areas to get to the elevator to MC. I have met and chatted with many residents who are from AL and/or IL. Most are quite pleasant and seem relatively happy. Most in the MC are also relatively happy (some who have regressed a lot may not seem to be, but there's a number of fairly cheerful people in her area!)
(TBC...)
Just make sure you like the nurses & aides, cuz they're the ones who will spend the most time looking after your dad. But remember, residents do die there, (natural causes of age)