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We have been caring for MIL at home for the past 6 years who needs around the clock care because of dementia. We have managed to share responsibilities with other siblings/ caregivers but most of the responsibility falls on us as I am married to a middle child who was very close to his mother. LOVE THE MAN! We are in our mid 30's and lower 40's. and still building a family. We have infertility issues that have not been addressed because of all the time this illness has taken from us. Finally husband and I are getting treatment and will be soon starting a family . THANK GOD! We cant afford to stop working so I am a little concern about the future, our relationship, bringing a baby to the world in this situation.
We have so much in our plate but at the same time I am getting older and dr. advise my egg count is very low so we need to hurry up. This puts more pressure. Putting her in a home is not an option . There are times he goes into her house for 2 weeks because the other siblings cant cover. This of course brings a lot of stress.


What I would like to know is the following:


1. Has anyone try to raise a family, work and care for a dementia patient at the same time? How? Results?


2. How long can we expect her to be around? Is it bad that I even think about this? Feeling guilty.


She has been wearing diapers for the past 2 yrs and needs everything done for her. During the night she will not sleep and will talk nonstop which is making caring for her very difficult. Sometimes she does not want to eat and is losing mobility.
-No other health conditions


3. How can we manage her sleep pattern better without increasing medication and what are the consequences ?


4. How do you reduce her having to pee so much at night? We put a tick pad inside diaper, she will still wet the bed and then take diaper off and pee more and sometimes the #2


5. How do you keep your sanity?


6. How do you set healthy boundries and admit your limitations?


This illness is the worst. I married the love of my life at age 27 and for the past 8 yrs have supported him through his mom's illness but I also belive he needs a family for when she is gone and don't want us to lose that opportunity and fall into bitterness later. Will appreciate your advice.

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I completely understand the reasons you have for wanting to keep her at home. ESPECIALLY in view of covid-19. I also have a mom with Alzheimer's Dementia and is sounds like she is a little bit more advanced than your mom but not too much.

My mom entered the "wandering at night" stage a few months ago. I give her 10-15 mg of melatonin at bedtime and that helps her get to sleep (sometimes I give her a rx of mertazimine 7.5mg too. It's keeping her asleep that's hard. I've started keeping her up an hour later (abt 11:00 pm) then giving her the sleep meds ith milk and calcium. (also keep daytime napping down to 1 or 2 naps of 1 hour or less).

Most nights, I get some sleep so far by following this. Its hard but you can make it better by finding what works for her.

Best of luck,
you are in our prayers as I know how hard and necessary it is to care for you mom.

Diana
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Like many others who have posted I am curious as to why care facility is not an option? My mother is 93 and has always been fearful of being "put in a home." Even after working several years as a nurse in one of the best facilities in our city!

Well fast forward 25 years and she is now living in a very good facility due to dementia. My brother and I keep a close watch on her, window visits right now but the staff know we are being observant. She is clean, relatively healthy, and has her medical needs closely monitored.

There are many excellent SNF and AL options out there, staffed by caring nurses and aides. Sure, there will always be the bad eggs but we have found most to be good people. And 3-4 shifts in 24 hours means they are relatively well rested and can go home after a 6-8 hour shift. Can you say that about yourself? Especially with a new baby?

I admire anyone who is willing and able to take on the care of an adult with dementia. But it only took a few weeks of Mom living with me to recognize that I could not do it long term. It would not have been fair to me or my mother and potentially harmful to us both.

Good luck with whatever decision you choose, and best wishes on starting your new family.
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If you think you are over whelmed now with caring and working, just wait until you have a baby.  And WHY is putting her into a home "out of the question"?  Is there anyway you can check into private nurse home care for her.  You would need 2 to divide up the hours in a day (this was done for a man up the road where I live). both would do 12 hour shifts.  Nobody knows how long each stage of dementia lasts.....it could last another 3 or 4 years.......then what, handling a toddler, maybe preschool, etc on top of everything else.  When do YOU sleep?  when do YOU get YOUR house work done?  All of this stress will NOT be good even when going thru other steps to get pregnant........what happens IF the doctor tells you that YOU need 24 hour bed rest, other than to go to the bathroom?  WHO is going to handle everything then?  I think its time to speak with other family members, contact an Elder attorney, and discuss placing your MIL into a home.  (you can make arrangements with the homes to check them out before placing her).  The money will come from HER, and when the money runs down...she can then be placed on Medicaid...........(an elder attorney can help in saving some of her money).  Wishing you luck in both your hopes to start a family and also in placing your MIL.
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I see several commenters posting about ways to prolong the time in which you can start a family. We have 10 grandkids, 6 great-grands and one more great-grand on the way. Kids are exhausting for everyone, but to me it seems that the one child who had his only child rather late in life, struggles more than the others. I know that I can't play with my younger grandkids the way I did when the older ones were little. In my early 50's, I could crawl in a playhouse, sit in a sandbox, skip down the sidewalk. Not so much anymore. LOL. I can still get down on the floor, but can't stay there too long and watching me get up is not a pretty sight. LOL. How old you will be raising your children is something to consider. And I think your MIL would be well-cared for in the right facility.
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If she is on a STATIN of any kind stop giving it to her, our brains need cholesterol to survive. Next, We all have guilt in this situation, I pray you have faith and ask the Lord for strength. Not all NH are bad, many are wonderful. The people are trained in this. Good luck and please pray .
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"Putting her in a home is not an option.'
Can you elaborate on this? Is it a financial issue or family preference?

If it's family, is it all the siblings or just your husband? The toll for 6 years of sharing care (with the bulk landing on him and you) is hard enough, but as this progresses, the stress and strain will only get worse. In answer to your 2nd query - there's no real time line. It varies depending on the underlying health of the person and what type of dementia. Some progress faster, some take much longer. If she is relatively healthy, she could live many more years, becoming more and more dependent and lose mobility. This will take an even bigger toll. Even with sibling help, this is a major undertaking and can impact ALL facets of your lives.

Some promise not to place a parent. Some still think these places are awful. The promises can't always be kept forever and sometimes it reaches a point when it is better to use a facility. Guilt? It happens, but when one can spend time LOVING the parent instead of cleaning up after them, it is better for all! Do take time to visit, when it can be done, places. Mom's place is very nice and I wouldn't object to living there if needed!

If it's financial, there are often ways to mitigate. If someone has POA, her house could be sold and the proceeds used to fund a facility. It would be wise to consult with an EC atty, to know what can and can't be done, what financial restrictions there might be, what options are available.

If in the end either preference or finances preclude a facility, you can hire CNAs to cover care during overnights and other times. It is more expensive for full-time care than a facility, but is an option to provide some relief for those caring.

For your questions:

1. This is difficult at best. Having to tend to emergencies, lack of sleep, etc can take a toll on one's health and could impact employment. Raising a family is stressful in itself, at times, and having to juggle that with full time care for someone else is going to be taxing for everyone!

2. Medical professionals might be able to guess, but there's really no way to know.

3. This should be done with medical advice - doesn't mean medication all the time, but they may have ideas. Sometimes a mild dose can do wonders but not impact much else. I'm not a fan of medications, but the anti-anxiety did help get us through the 1st UTI/sun-downing. It also relaxed her enough that she would go to bed at a normal time, but she wasn't "doped" up.

4. Have urine culture done. Mom's 1st UTI at MC showed up as sun-downing (behavioral), but the last 2 resulted in night time bed wetting. She wears briefs and has a pad insert, but would SOAK everything. Once treated, no soaking!

5. Who says we do??? ;-)

6. At the stage she's at, it's likely hard to set any boundaries. I think some deep conversations between you and your husband, maybe siblings, are in order to discuss and know when anyone has reached their limit. The fact that they are not contributing as much hints at perhaps it has become too much for them. What you describe sounds overwhelming to me (hubby.)

"This illness is the worst." - agreed. Bad enough that it is terminal, but to not know how long or what to expect...

While caring for his mother is important to this man in your life, and you do what you can to support him, I think he needs to really step back and see what this is doing to him and your relationship. While I can understand someone can love enough to want to be there to the end, it would be much better to have her under someone else's care, so that he can spend QUALITY time with her - loving on her, taking her out, if possible, advocating for her - in sum, being her loving son again instead of a care-taker. It relieves the stress of getting all that drudgery done and allows us to give our love as best we can to those who may not fully understand anymore. We know.
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Pepsi46 Aug 2020
I agree with everything you said.
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Imho, I would have to know the age of your MIL. Based on you and your DH being in your mid 30s to early 40s, MIL may be roughly mid 60s? Since she is otherwise healthy other than the dementia, she may still have quite a few years left. You no doubt will require more help especially since you want to start a family quite soon.
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So sorry for all your problems with this awful disease. In my opinion, the place for your MIL is a healthcare facility. I don't know what the circumstances are that make you say a Nursing Home is out of the question. But, I sincerely would advise it. It is next to impossible to be a wife, then mother, homemaker, nurse, along with loosing sleep at night, and still stay sane.
I do think that, should money be the problem, you should investigate Medicaid. Medicaid is wonderful. Give it a try. If it's because her son, your husband, can't seem to let go, I suggest he visit a couple of N.H. to get a better feel of those kind of places. They are not ALL bad. Start looking into them because, with dementia and disability as your MIL has, things will not get better. You need to keep your sanity and concentrate on your future together.
While in a nursing home or whatever, Mom will get 24 hour care divided among three people. She will be changed often; will be bathe easily with apparatus that you don't have at home; will be fed, if necessary; will have her clothes washed and cleaned. Then there will come a time where Mom, eventually, will not know who you are. But, believe me, I've been there, she will be taken care of so much better than what you can do at home. No matter how much "help" you get.
There are 10 stages of dementia....specifically Alzheimer. Each stage progresses at different speeds for everyone and also different phases cross over to other phases. My mother is in her last stage, however, she can still talk and carry on somewhat of a conversation. There is no telling how long a stage lasts.
And, no.....you are not a bad person to wonder when your MIL will pass on. Anyone who takes care of a relative with dementia wonders the same thing.
I wish you peace and I hope you find a place for your MIL soon so that you can get on with your life and future.
If Mom can afford in home care, at least for a few days a week, that would help a lot. I certainly hope that either you or your husband have POA for healthcare and monetary concerns. Peace be yours and soon.
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I will begin by saying how thankful I am that husband and sister supported me through our journey with my mom. My children and grandchildren came first, but they were all supportive of our care for mom too.
For you, having a family can't wait too much longer so you will need to focus on that. You will also need to be supportive of your husband as he helps mom. You did state that you have support of family and caregivers.... You just may need to pass more of the support their way at certain times. It also sounds like mil doesn't live in your house, so at least that is not an issue. You should support your husband as he cares for his mom.
#1 Luckily my children were adults when I was caring for my mom, but I did homeschool a grandson during that time. I was lucky that my boss allowed me to work almost entirely from home...on my own schedule. I didn't have any physical help from siblings, just my husband and occasionally my children. It was very rewarding...I was blessed to be holding my mom's hand as she took her last breath.
#2 Your mil doesn't sound like she is stage 7 yet. When my mom got to stage 7, no longer talking or walking, has to be hand fed, she still lived 3 years.... 2years on hospice.
#3 Sleep is tough. I tried some of the things others suggested. Keeping her up more during the day, limiting sugar and drinks later in day, setting a schedule.... I didn't want to use meds. Many nights we were up... It is a big part of the disease. Sorry, one of the things that make it the worst on those of us caring for them.
#4 It is best to limit lemonade, tea, coffee, soda. Also looking water close to bedtime. I also invested in more expensive overnight disposable briefs.
#5 Sanity? I am not sure if we keep our sanity ;-) For me, I was luck to have my children and grandchildren around ...for you, with a (hopefully) new baby? Well, you will need to not be doing as much of the care, and you need to be sure that you have help when your husband is taking time to help his mom... But he will need to find a balance too. You will need his support with baby and you will need to support him to care for his mom....balancing act!
#6 This is the tough question. Give yourself a break... You can't be everything for everyone.... And neither can your husband. Stop and think, if you were your mil, what would you feel was fair? How would you want to be cared for? If your parent were in this position, what kind of support would you want from your husband?
Finally, just love your husband and support each other. Much luck
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Dear, Erica1, why is a facility placement not an option?? And, no mention of her age. MIL has a disability and not able to care for herself. Your MIL needs either 24-hour caregivers or be placed in a facility. Get a social worker for assistance. There is an option, Covid or not. MIL's required care is beyond your capable level. She can spend down to Medicaid eligibily.
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I am a self-employed caregiver. My specialty is seniors with Alzheimer's/Dementia. All this is great advice, but let's turn that puppy round. As bad as she "gets on your last nerve," have you stopped to consider how bad you get on hers? The ones with this horrific disease, are still "in there," somewhere. They are also like small children - they act out. Sometimes, the bed-wetting, removing the pads, is a way of "getting even," or the temper tantrums. I know as we age, the bladder, among other stuff, get weaker. Just as a baby, it can't be controlled - they know what happened, just couldn't hold it. Part of all this is the anger they feel - know somethings wrong, and don't have a clue bout how to fix it. There's no way to get them to your mindset - try getting into theirs - watch, observe what sets them off, it could be anything, and prevent it next time. If you feel you can't deal anymore, I would check into a facility somewhere. If she's that bad, she won't even remember being in your home tomorrow. DO NOT FEEL GUILTY FOR HAVING A LIFE. No guilt, no regrets. But sugar, you need help, now.
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disgustedtoo Aug 2020
While some, esp in early stages and highly dependent on what the person was like before dementia, sure, some of what they do could be "acting out", but I really doubt my mothers incontinence, repetition and so forth has anything to do with "acting out." She has dementia and it affects everyone differently. Sure, they often share common symptoms and actions, but each one is unique.

I think in this case, if the MIL is truly stage 7, there really isn't a way to "get into her head" or reality. That suggestion works often to help when the LO gets stuck on anxiety about a family member or has some delusions. Once they get to this stage, there isn't much reality left.

My first suggestion for the night time issue is get her tested for UTI - preferably the urine culture, not just the dip stick test. When I joined this forum, reading suggestions to test for UTI seemed odd... until it happened to mom. She had UTIs often over the years, but the first one after moving to MC resulted in some SERIOUS sun-downing! However, the next 2 showed up as night time bed wetting. She wears disposable panties and has pads inserted at night. She would SOAK herself, the bed, her nightgown, etc. This shows up as extra laundry charges (14 one month! how does a woman in a wheelchair generate that much extra laundry? Bed wetting due to UTI.) Once treated, the wetting stops.
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This answer will fall in the minority. It is somewhat appalling the callousness with which people will say "put her in a home now." Sometimes that's necessary, sure, but you're not throwing away an old toy. This is a person, the mother your husband loves so much, and the reason you have him. But you realize that. No shame in wondering how long this could last. You need a good, deep conversation with him about the future, with a good counselor to make sure it doesn't turn into an argument and is productive. You need to do what's best by her and you as a couple. Starting a family means one day we are the elders, and we'd want our kids to do right by us. It's obvious you care, but are stretched thin. There's no one perfect solution but getting more family involved or paid care could help. Best of luck.
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disgustedtoo Aug 2020
Not all of us are being callous when we suggest finding a facility. It becomes ever more difficult, both physically and emotionally, to provide full care for an adult with dementia (any adult really, but dementia adds another whole layer.)

You say "There's no one perfect solution but getting more family involved or paid care could help."

I will agree that there really is no one perfect solution, but we have to weigh those options we DO have and try to select the best of the choices, for everyone involved.

Family help:
As for getting more family involved - AHAHAHAHAHAHA, sure... There are NUMEROUS threads and comments in this forum regarding this topic. While there are a few bright spots, comments from siblings who work together, most of the comments and questions are from those who DON'T get help or support, even when they ask or beg for help. Asking my brothers for help only frustrated and angered me with their lack of support or even understanding. OB just yelled at me to "give it up." Oh, that was useful help from family, eh? The other brother...let's not go there. I will only say that at this point I need him to take mom to 1 appt, 4x/yr, as it is outside the transport area, no other options and I can't support her weight. He doesn't visit, does nothing to help me and tries to get out of these appts! Once she passes on, he will join OB as persona non grata. OB has been there over 2 years and I want nothing to do with this abuser (another reason for not letting him care for mom, like he even could - he couldn't even tolerate a short visit with her the last time he was here!!!) I have no spouse to help and would NOT ask my kids - they have their own lives and issues.

I for one can say WITHOUT hesitation that I knew I would not be able to care for my mother in my home (many reasons, esp access to get in/out and being physically unable to support her weight, but also very small bathrooms that are too small to handicap and renovations being on hold mid-way for several years now. It would NOT be a safe place for her.)

Bringing in help:
Despite trying to introduce aides (1hr M-F) to get her used to them so we could increase the time as needed so she could stay in her own condo, that fell flat in less than 2 months. She refused to let them in. Her place was about 1.5 hr from me, OB lives 2 days away and YB is still working, so it isn't like any of us is near enough to respond quickly to issues or provide daily assistance. NEITHER brother would be a good caregiver, esp OB (I could write a book about those 2.)

So, don't assume that we who advocate for finding a safe place for someone means we are callous. In this person's case, it does sound like it might be the only real solution - trying to live a life, work full-time, start a family and having to spend 2 weeks at a time, often lacking sleep is a recipe for disaster. Sometimes the best we can do is find a GOOD place for them, and then become the child again, advocating for the parent, visiting often, watching over them without the stress-inducing need to provide all the hands-on care. Moving someone to a GOOD (ignore the "STARS" reviews, check them out yourself!) facility and providing all the non-hands-on care and visits will reduce stress and free us up to spend QUALITY time with a LO rather than digging ourselves an early grave.
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With what you describe, YOU should NOT be the one taking care of her. You must do all you can to take care of yourself before it is too late for you. With her condition, she should be placed where she is cared for. This situation is only going to get worse and if there is a baby, it will be an impossible responsibility. Don't wait - place her and on the baby bit.
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At this stage of her life, I would just ask the doctor to increase her medicine at night. She isn’t going to get better.
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How old is the mother-in-law? You said putting her in a facility is not an option. In that case, pressure needs to be applied to the siblings to help or bring up a nursing home to prod them into helping more. Past that, you are just in a pickle.
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Try talking with the siblings to create a calendar where everyone does an equal load. It may be falling on hubby because he doesn't say no and other siblings know that.

It sounds like your hubby works remotely to be able to stay 2 weeks at a time. Do any of the other siblings also work remotely? For those who don't, they could fill in for their days off, like from Fri evening to Sunday evening.
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I have my mom also living with us and caring for her 24/7 is not easy especially with Corona situation, I can not hire anyone! It's extremely hard. You have siblings but I don't! You need to ask them to step up and take over and let you live or at least contribute to hire someone to live in if you have an extra room (hopefully is tested and screened for Corona).
She has lived her life, you need to live too and have your family. You are lucky to have siblings. Get them to work!
Best of luck...🙏🙏🙏
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Patathome01 Aug 2020
I think MIL requires facility quatantine and placement since even outside family or other help is Corona risk. Yes, what a mess I feel sorry for.
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I am going to add an option I do not see. Freeze your eggs and hubbys sperm. Wait. Cryopreservation will keep your eggs viable, when the time is better, do an invitro and have them implanted. I had my MIL moved in with us when my third daughter was on the way, she was functional but cranky, as time went on and a fourth child arrived, her mind deteriorated, and ultimately we had to pass her to another family member. My youngest just turned 31 this year, and Grandma Mary passed last year. She was in a SNF for the last twenty years of her life. She was 91. Keep your MIL at home for now, look in to home care aides,either through an agency, contact your local Aging and Adult office, find out if they have the IN HOME SUPPORT SERVICES. IHSS. program that allows Medicaid to help pay for either a family member OR a "lay caregiver" they have screened and trained to come help.
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LS2234 Aug 2020
One reason for trying to keep a LO home as long as possible is that it can help, a little, with the mental state. Familiar surroundings and objects help ground the person in reality, trigger memories such as basic skills of hygiene and function, things we do by habit. It can be very disorienting for someone to move into a new place, whether that is a childs home or a facility, as a lifetime of reflexes and body memory are interrupted. Things like walking exactly ten steps to the bathroom, turn left, sit on the commode....
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Wow. So many things going on here. I originally began to comment as in my dads case his stage 7 was very very short, of course he over ninety when first diagnoses and his last stages were exacerbated by a couple of bouts of pneumonia.

That said, in your case I dont know how you can or can be expected to keep this up. You have your own work and family planning issues to deal with and hopefully then little kids in the house

I would think for everyones benefit, including your moms, she has to be put somewhere who can give her the care she needs. I was very close to my dad and wanted to keep him in his home with my mom but my mom didnt want that and even though I said I would help a whole lot, to be fair it would be her burden and decision.

I guess the point is I know what your husband may be feeling, may a sense of duty to care for mom until the end and perhaps feeling putting her in a facility would be a sense of abandonment. I felt those things but NO one in this scenario can go on like this without losing sanity.
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In my opinion, I can not believe that anyone would tell you to put your loved one in a home or facility!! Obviously they have never spent time in one. If they had, they would know how awful, horrible and terrifying they are. My experience, even with these so called 5 stars facilities are all BAD!! There is only one caregiver for 15 to 25 people. So that does not give much personal time to your loved one.
Once, in this so called 5 star facilitiy, I was with my mother and they told me that I could not help her to the bathroom, we had to call for assistance by an employee. Well we pushed the call button and NO ONE showed up for 2 hours. I ended up taking her to the bathroom my self. Then at another facility I went to see my mom early in the morning from just admitting her the night before. As I was walking to her room she was in the hall in a wheel chair, crying, shivering in just her thin nightgown. As I got to her she held me so hard saying "PLEASE, GET ME OUT OF HERE". That afternoon I had her back home. And this happened with several other facilities, one that let her fall and get massive skin tears, another that when she fell in the bathroom and after no one came to help her, she tried to get to the bathroom herself and she fell and was laying on the bathroom floor for hours before they checked on her!
Again, I can not say it enough, IF YOU LOVE THIS PERSON THEN PLEASE DO NOT PUT THEM IN A HOME OR FACILITY!!! These places are where you send people to die, alonely.
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disgustedtoo Aug 2020
While we can respect that you have had bad experiences, posting like this does NOT do anyone else any good. It sounds like your mother was in a NH. There are "bad" places, whether they are NHs, ALs, MCs, but painting them all as hell holes does not help others. Saying they are 5 star places doesn't help either. ANYONE can post 5 star ratings on a pile of dog crap. I based nothing on any "reviews". I found places in the area near where I live and I VISITED them. Look. Listen. Ask. Smell, Taste. Yes, TASTE - we were offered a free meal in the place during our "tour" with mom. USE your senses, not these stupid reviews.

There were 3 local places, but one was what I think is called continuing care. These require a HUGE up front payment in addition to monthly fees. To this day I don't understand what that payment is for - it isn't used to cover the monthly rent. I crossed that off the list immediately. The first of the other 2 was less than ideal. I didn't care for the layout, and in particular was concerned that the MC unit was on the 2nd floor - in an emergency, when the elevator can't be used, how do you get all these dementia patients, many with walkers and wheelchairs, out? Nope. Before we arranged to see/inquire about these 2, YB found another. It was nice, newly built, just about to open. It was more the location, room setup and cost that took this one off the list for me. Sure, it was about 5 min from where he lives, but more like 40m for me and I already KNEW I would be the one doing most of the advocacy (supplies, payments, visits, etc.), so the distance would be an issue, esp in winter. The location and view was awful. The room we were shown for the quoted cost was SHARED - 2 BRs, one bath, no closure AND looked out over the parking lot and 4 lane roadway. The last place was still in the process of being built. It had been really old buildings and the decision was to tear down and start new. We could see the pix, ask questions, etc. The deposit gave us first choice in room location (all look out into an interior garden) and was refundable. We went to the open house with mom, and later for a special tour (they opened in stages, IL, then AL, with MC being a bit delayed until they had a few residents lined up.)

This place is private pay and mom has been there about 4.5 YEARS. It is nice enough that if I were to need such accommodation, I WOULD want to go there. The staff is great, the place is clean and nice. I wouldn't hesitate to recommend it to anyone!!! I have no idea what their "rating" is and I really don't care. I can SEE for myself that it is a very nice place.

So, relating your own bad experiences can be helpful, IF you temper it with guidance to LOOK at the places yourself before making a decision. Please stop painting all facilities with the paint from hell.

(BTW, I tried bringing in aides, just to get her used to it so we could let her stay in her own condo for as long as possible. 1hr/day M-F. This didn't last 2 months when she refused to let them in. YOUR alternative might work for some, but there are MANY reasons why I can't care for my mother - logistics, her weight, and my place being stuck mid-way through renovations are among the top. She is doing VERY well in the place and they are doing what I could NEVER be able to do for her.)
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I am not sure why you and your husband think it is so horrible to put her in a facility where they have three shifts of people who have been professionally trained and have the equipment to manage your mother in law 24/7.  There are some fantastic facilities out there.  I think you need to visit several before you totally rule them out.  If you don't think you have any time, money or sleep...wait until you add a baby into the mix.
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If you think you've got troubles now, wait till a baby arrived! Dementia will get worse. What reason can't elderly person go to facility? That's where she belongs. If you refuse faculty you've got troubles!
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Though it is expensive, you can get in home nursing care. That is my best suggestion.
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Patathome01 Aug 2020
She can also spend down to Medicaid eligiblity for home care?
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For sleep try melatonin, a natural herb.

Take it 1 hour before bed time, it helps reset the body clock and seems to work well. Not sure with advanced dementia but worth a try and don't think it can do any harm. Was suggested by neurologist.
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Talk to your friends who have children and work about how they manage those aspects of their lives 24/7/365. You may find that small children require a lot of attention from both of their parents. Use the information that you glean from them to have a series of discussions with your husband. Decide together how you will prioritize your marriage, then your future children, and finally your MIL.

It appears that MIL may need to see a doctor about her sleeplessness and nocturnal urinary issues. I would also suggest that it may be time to hire care for MIL during the night, and probably the days when everybody is working. Another option is probably a residential memory care unit since she seems to require more care than is allowed for adult day program or assisted living.
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One question I have is about something the OP didn't provide--how old is the MIL? Just guessing from their ages, I would suspect the MIL is probably in her 70s--if so, and if she is relatively healthy other than the dementia, she may live several more years or perhaps a decade, and this must be taken into account when planning.

It will be a shame if Erica, at the age of 50 and childless, sits around wishing her MIL had been in a facility during the years she could have spent giving birth and rearing a child!
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Dad’s on Hospice with Alzheimer’s and cancer. He hasn’t slept well at nite in more than 5 or 6 years. Hospice nurse said Alzheimers is like diabetes of the brain. Cut way back on sugar, keep him up more during the day and his sleep patterns will change. It’s been 2-1/2 months since I brought him home from MC lockdown nightmare. He doesn’t get anything sugary after lunchtime, except a few pieces of fruit if we’re struggling to keep him up. He’s sleeping 4-6 hours at a time, having his brief changed and going back to bed. He’s clearer, has better disposition and even looks rested! It’s been incredible to watch! He’s 90 and wheelchair bound, stage 6 now. To sweeten things we’ll use a littt Th le local honey or fresh fruit and he drinks mostly water or milk. You might give it a try. Note: he lost a little weight once off sugar, but looks and feels much better! Good luck!
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Why isn't putting her into nursing care an option? You cannot deal with a baby and her at the same time!!! You won't survive! And you won't survive a pregnancy under these conditions. What's the deal with the other siblings? Do they hate both of you? Are you masochists? You need to take care of yourself now or there won't be any children.
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Can u Not get carers to come to the home, I'm a carer, the lady I care for is 95, with dementia, she recently stopped eating and drinking but has started to eat mashed foods only and drink sips here n there she was on trazadona and risperdona to help aid sleep at nights and keep away psychotic episodes, she also uses dopers with an insert, her mobility is becoming less but then other days she's up walking with frame, she can no longer communicate verbally so I need to watch for non verbal communication. Maybe you could get a carer to come some days just so you can have rest. Or even just overnight so yous can sleep. I am a mother of 2 small boys 3 and 5 years old I work 3cdays 1 week and 5 days the next and that keeps running like that every week. My partner has to deal with our kids at home while I'm at work it's hard at times as I don't see my little ones a lot but we get by. I do housework and ironing when home so he gets some rest too
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If you can afford it, I recommend a Memory Care Facility. They are very expensive because they can provide one on one care.
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