Follow
Share

She is in good health (most of the time) and has dementia (as do most in the facility). She has learned to open the doors and leave. I just learned the hard way that the facility is not an "official lock down facility". We went to considerable trouble to move her from a secure memory care facility to this home in the town she had lived in from 1952 until 2014. My sister and my two stepbrothers live there and she has had a lot of visitors from her church. I live in the metroplex (Dallas/Fort Worth area) and had her here for the past 4 years. We moved her because she was getting UTI infections and was sent to the hospital several times. The ER/ hospital visits were wearing on my sister and me and very confusing to my mother. My sister doesn't want her to come back here (and I understand and appreciate that). But now we will have to move her somewhere that none of us are near. To be perfectly honest, I didn't visit her much when she was in memory care near me. She had full time entertainment and didn't seem to know/care if I visited. She's pretty good at entertaining herself but loves attention. I guess I'm just venting.

This question has been closed for answers. Ask a New Question.
Find Care & Housing
because of your Mom’s condition, you and your sister need to carefully consider where she will go next. Research and review every feasible option. Because she tends to wander, she needs a secure unit. Because she has chronic infections, she needs skilled nursing where she can be tested and medicated if needs be without being sent to the ER. There are facilities who can handle both these issues and more should Mom need them. My mom was in a SNF with a lockdown unit. She also had chronic uti’s and at a Care Conference we decided to test her monthly which they did, even when she was transferred from the regular floor to the locked unit. It was all the same facility/building.

I believe the location of the facility is second to the services they provide at this point. You said you didn’t visit her much. Soon, she will no longer recognize her friends from church, and as long as the facility isn’t hours and hours away, they can still get together as a group and make a day of it if needs be. Right now, finding a facility that meets her needs for as long as she requires that care takes precedent over her social life.
Helpful Answer (1)
Report

If your mother enjoys her hometown visitors, I would encourage you and your sister to consider memory care facilities closer to the hometown first. Since your mother will spend all her time at the facility and only a portion of her time with visitors, the quality of the facility and its programs should weigh more in your ultimate placement decision.

Studies have shown that cranberry juice fights UTIs and there are several cranberry supplements available in liquid and pill form. My mother hasn't had a UTI since the doctor approved adding a cranberry supplement to my mother's daily medications.

Good luck in your difficult search!
Helpful Answer (3)
Report

Time for her to return to memory care.
Helpful Answer (1)
Report

This question has been closed for answers. Ask a New Question.
Ask a Question
Subscribe to
Our Newsletter