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Our father has Parkinson's and dementia and our mother has had a stroke and still in the hospital. Our mother was the caregiver for our father, but can no longer take care of herself, let alone him. He has moved to respite care, while we see how our mother recovers. Her recovery is not going well. We hoped they could move to assisted living together when she was discharged, but we now think that she'll need to be in long term care since she can't do anything independently. Since our father got sick 3yrs ago, our lives have turned upside down. Now with our mother also very ill, our lives are even more chaotic. We're running back and forth between them, getting what they need, making decisions, and lots of worrying. How do other caregivers deal with the burnout? My friends don't even know what to say anymore, because it's just a constant stress. Any advice would be very much appreciated.

I haven't had to manage the care of two parents, but it sounds like a lot! And no-one is ever really truly prepared for that. Most of us don't think about it or plan for it. It just happens, and we try to figure it out as we go.
Believe me, my story is no less trying; my husband suffered a massive stroke at the age of 53. Up to that point, we were very active and enjoyed a lot of road trips and adventures together. Then, all of a sudden, he couldn't walk or talk or eat. Bam! It happens. We try and figure it out. We will make mistakes along the way, and hopefully learn from them. It's no wonder caregivers suffer from stress and burnout! You're trying to manage too much on your own, and it has become more than you can comfortably keep up with.
You might benefit from a geriatric care manager. That is someone who coordinates the cares your parents need, taking a lot off your plate.

I'm so sorry your mother is now unable to be independent. You might find a care community which houses different levels so at least your mother and father can be under one community roof. That makes it easier for you visiting, and for them to see each other.
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Reply to CaringWifeAZ
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Sounds like they both may need long term nursing home level care. This will be a help to you as you can be their advocate and adult child instead of trying to cope in two places and coordinate care. I recall my mom’s post stroke days too well, she had lots of therapy in hopes of recovery. I’m sorry you’re in such a rough time now and hope it settles down.
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Reply to Daughterof1930
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They both need to be in long-term care, whether Assisted Living, Memory Care, or Skilled Nursing, together or separately. Make an inventory of their assets (house, savings, investments, etc.) plus income (Social Security, pensions, RMDs, etc.) and meet with an Elder Law attorney for guidance on how to fund their care needs. Don't let them come home, as moving them to care is easier from a hospital or rehab, where they may think it's temporary, than moving them directly out of their home.

Does anyone have their POAs?

Not meaning to blame anyone here, because it has been an all-around frazzling situation. But others should take note that when couples insist on staying home with one taking care of the other, it can cause physical harm. Your mother may have had the stroke anyhow, but she may not have, if they had gone to AL together earlier.

I'm truly sorry you're in this stressful situation. I hope you can find solutions and appropriate placement for both of them. Not sure who "we" is, but if it's siblings, I hope you can do this cooperatively without too much disagreement. Let us know how things go. Be careful not to burn yourself out any further in the process (easier said than done, I know).
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Reply to MG8522
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If your parents have any assets (house, car, savings, etc) these should be used to fund a sustainable, permanent care solution for them. Your Mom may indeed need to be in a LTC facility. The good news is that if she qualifies medically and then eventually qualifies financially, it is covered by Medicaid plus her SS income benefit. You will need to consult with a certified elder law attorney or Medicaid Planner for their home state to get proper guidance.

The same goes for your Dad: he may need only AL for now so should go into a good, local facility that has a continuum of care levels and accepts Medicaid. Both parents can be in the same facility.

If your parents have assigned PoAs (and hopefully it is no each other only), then this person or people need to read their PoA document to see what activates their authority. They will need this to deal with any of their financial institutions. Medical institutions are less strict.

It will all be very hard and exhausting and then it will become better once permanent care is in place. I wish you success in reaching that point soon!
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Reply to Geaton777
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