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Mine is 10 to 1 during the day which might sound good but it isn't. All ten need assistance with something to get ready in morning. Getting dressed, brush teeth (if the aides do it), going to the bathroom, showering, etc. etc. How can one aide do this? If the aide is busy with one resident, the other nine are left unattended? How is this safe? If you want share the facility name I think would be great because if it is a good place, they should be recognized and if it is a bad place it should be known so others know where to stay away from.



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agingmom123: Perhaps no facility is perfection.
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Reply to Llamalover47
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1 to 8 during the day 1 to 10 at night I think.
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Reply to JustAnon
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I believe the question isn't to be directed to others about ratios where they live or have a loved one; the issue and need is to address the situation with the executive director and management of the facility.

* Often, facilities have difficulties hiring enough care providers. (I believe it is happening all over the country - this shortage of staffing)
* They may not be trained well nor supervised well
* Ask about supervision/follow-up training to ensure (proper) care is given.
* Hire your own caregiver as you can (1-2 hours several times a week) or get volunteers to assist your loved one.
* Keep a journal of care / needs: date, time, who, when, what.
* Take photos as you can

* As needed, report the facility to the licensing board. (I did this).
- First, try to work with an Ombudsman to 'work out the deficient care'

Gena / Touch Matters


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Reply to TouchMatters
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FIrst, look up your state regulations (an elder care attorney or geriatric case manager can help with this info), to see if there is anything specific. THere may or may not be any prescribed regulations. Its possible the regulations are the same for Memory Care as Assisted Living.

THen, if they are meeting regulations, see if you think the number of caregivers is adequate to meet the needs, and if they are doing a reasonable job.
If not, its easy for us to say "move to a better Memory Care place". The hard part of that is that, sometimes the better staffed places with better reputations might have long wait lists. Then you need to decide whether to get on that waitlist and wait.
for now, see what you can do with speaking with the facility staff. Will they let you get your own personal aide for part of the day to provide some extra care if needed?
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Reply to strugglinson
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agingmom123 Jan 29, 2024
Thank you for your reply. The current place would love for me to hire a private aide, so theirs don't have to work even less than they do already.
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You wrote in another post, "Make demands known and escalate quickly." I have learned to live by this mantra taking care of my LO." If you don't like the facility your LO is residing in, move them out. Making constant demands and escalating them quickly is not the way to make a point.

In a private pay Memory Care residence, caregivers never shower residents first thing in the morning during busy times but put them on a schedule instead. Care conferences should be scheduled quarterly to discuss what's happening with the LO and any changes or concerns are brought up for discussion. In between conferences, I'd contact either the executive director or the head nurse to bring up questions or issues in a calm manner. They were always resolved quickly, and if not, I'd send another email or make a call. If the MC my mother lived at had nothing but issues forcing me to constantly feel upset and escalate that upset, I'd have moved her to one of the other myriad facilities available.

The caregivers at moms MC genuinely loved her and cared for her beautifully. Was everything perfect? Of course not, nothing ever is. But the pros of this MC outweighed the cons, is what it boiled down to. If your LOs facility's cons outweigh it's pros, consider looking for a better run MC that is NOT corporate owned, preferably. Mom's was privately owned and MUCH easier to deal with because there was no corporate red tape to cut thru. The ED made decisions on the spot, billing was done in the building, and all issues were resolved with no beurocracy to wade thru.
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Reply to lealonnie1
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agingmom123 Jan 29, 2024
Thank you for your reply. This one is corporate owned. I think most are corporate owned in the state I live - NJ. What state do you live in that there are MC facilities that are not corporate owned?
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My LO pays over $13K a month and they don't even toilet her after each meal. Only when they first wake her up, maybe once in the afternoon and change her pull up when putting to bed. Of course, the facility lies and tells me..." no no no, we always toilet her before and after every meal". No facility does that. They don't even know how to lie. If anyone wants to know the name of this facility, I am happy to share.

The facility looks very pretty and they do a 'decent' job of keeping the facility clean but that's all they care about and that's where it ends.
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Reply to agingmom123
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8:2
I pay dearly for that ratio.
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Reply to MammaDrama
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agingmom123 Jan 28, 2024
Can I ask what state are you in? Did to find a state that has good elder care.
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