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He refuses saying there are too many old people. My husband has alzheimers. Last year I took him to day care and he refused to stay and would not go back. I feel it would be so beneficial for him but he refuses to go back.

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I have a feeling some people refuse to go back to daycare because they see others who can barely get around, thus they are afraid they will be next :(

Would it be possible for you to go to the daycare and stay with him until he gets use to the place? Hopefully the place will have something he would really enjoy doing so he can look forward to going back.
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I don't know where your husband is at cognitively. This is what worked with my husband:

"You know that I am doing everything possible to keep you at home with me. That is what you want and what I want. I need your help to make this work. I need time to do my own things while I know you are safe and comfortable. I need you to go to the Adult Day place three days a week, while I go to my own appointments and do my own work." I didn't mention that I thought it would be good for him, too. Just that it was something he could do for me. He went, for about three years. At each quarterly care meeting when the social worker asked what his purpose was for being there he replied, "So Jeanne can have some time for herself."

I was lucky that he still retained the ability to understand the concept that I needed his help, and also lucky that he retained his personality that would be willing to help. I sure don't know if that would work with your husband. If you think it might, give it a try. Ask him to do it for your sake.
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How about a Legion Post or VFW for a few hours? They help out fellow vets.
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Could he be persuaded that he's going there to help out? The people who run the program might be able to give him some simple tasks to do, like folding newsletters, stuffing envelopes, putting away board games, handing out snacks or whatever. If he thinks he's a volunteer who's there to help the "old people," he might be willing to go.

I haven't had personal experience of using this tactic with the elderly, although it used to work very well with some of my students who resisted doing certain activities when I was teaching special ed. They were more willing to participate if they thought of themselves as helpers, instead of someone who needed help.
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I'm a huge fan of JeanneGibbs "Help me help you" strategy. It always, always worked with my dad.

Like Jeanne said, I wouldn't focus on how good it would be for my dad but how much it would help me out. This was the only way I could get my dad to do anything.

Good luck with the daycare.
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