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Mom is on (thankfully) a very simple med regimen: one pill she takes once a day, and one she takes three times a day. Her home help caregiver used to set them up in a labelled pillbox once a week. Well, the agency has now changed their procedure and wants to set them up once a month. It was a disaster. Mom got hopelessly confused about which box was which week. So now the agency says she needs them set up once a week again, BUT now only certified caregivers can do it, so a special person has to come just for that and it will cost $500 a month EXTRA! This is crazy and completely unaffordable. Is anyone aware of some other option? Like, are there pharmacies that will send a tech once a week to set up meds at someone’s home and not charge $125 a week to set up a week’s worth of four pills a day?! I am trying to negotiate with the agency, but so far all they’ve suggested is getting an electronic / automated pill dispenser, which - for anyone who knows my technophobe mother - would be a complete failure. She’d push buttons, break it, freak out when it beeped, or whatever. I live 1000 miles away and my mother already thinks I’m a controlling b***h and so no, I’m not calling her three times a day to tell her to take her pill. Any other options anyone can suggest? Thank you!

An 88 yo elder with "deteriorating dementia" who needs help with simple medication, cannot use a cell phone or a TV remote or *anything* electronic w/o freaking out, should not be living alone. Apply for Medicaid and get her into a long term care nursing facility where everything will be done for her. Call APS to report a vulnerable and demented elder living alone who cannot take meds and they may help with her placement.
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Reply to lealonnie1
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What about a service like MedPack?
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Reply to notgoodenough
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Some pharmacies will provide blister packed medications. Each day has a blister pack for every required dose, ie: AM, Noon, PM. There is a slight increase for the service but I’ve never paid anywhere near $500 a month for it. The caregiver would be able to pop out the doses as required each day. I get a four week supply delivered to the assisted living facility for my mother. Check with your local pharmacies. You can also get this from Amazon pharmacy and some mail order pharmacies. My mother takes a large number of medications and this is just a life saver.
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Reply to RLWG54
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Will they allow a family member or friend to load a weekly pill box weekly?
Some agencies will do this.

An agency I had spoken to and considered actually said the opposite of what you are decribing. Their home caregivers can make sure a client takes their pills but are not allowed to touch the pill box at all, and they do not have med techs or RNs who can come to load them. THey expect family to load them at whatever interval the family wants.
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Reply to strugglinson
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My SIL is an RN. Until recently she set up someone’s pills for her. I believe she went to their house, and I think she was privately hired. This was in Michigan.
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Reply to Fawnby
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There are monthly pill boxes that have sections that come out. If there is an aide, she can bring out the ones needed for the week. Phillips has a pill dispenser that u fill and lock. You set an alarm for the times the pill will dispense. The dispenser will talk and say time for pills. Mom will push a button and a little container pops out with the pill or pills in it. I saw this shown 12 yrs ago, they maybe better now. You rent them.
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Reply to JoAnn29
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RunningOnFumes Jan 10, 2024
Nope. She would never in a million years be able to deal with this kind of arrangement. She cannot use a cell phone or a TV remote or *anything* electronic. If it talked or beeped, she would freak. Not an option. :-(
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Your mom probably qualifies for home health through Medicare. One of their primary jobs is to set up the meds. They will also do her vitals, bring in an aide to bath her and help get therapy on-site if needed.
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Reply to 97yroldmom
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RunningOnFumes Jan 10, 2024
She does not. This is strictly home assistance, not health / medical care. This is all self-pay.
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Is mom in Hospice Care or living alone with outside help, or simply living alone?

In Hospice, organizing meds is something they do as part of the package deal.

If she lives completely alone--well--you're kind of sunk. I'm sorry, since that often leads to much bigger headaches--like overdosing b/c they don't remember what they are taking, how much and/or when. (My MIL has OD'ed several times, and fallen. She wants to be independent, so the kids leave her messages on the counter with the meds. I know she's not taking them appropriately.)

If mom has CG's, then they can do this. when I was working elder care, I wasn't 'supposed' to handle the meds. All well and good, but my client sure didn't want somebody else coming in every week to do it and it took all of 10 minutes to do.


I also wasn't supposed to touch them at all--but that is plainly stupid. She shook so badly she couldn't HOLD the darn things, so I would put one in her mouth, then give her drink, and on and on until that dose was done. I will say this was done with the full knowledge of her family and their blessing to do so.

As long as mom's primary CG's agree on someone dispensing the meds, IDK what you can do. People want to be independent. But mucking about with medications is not something many of them can do properly.

Who IS on the battleground, if it's not you? This is just something that you, being 1000 miles away, can properly handle.
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Reply to Midkid58
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I can't believe how few meds your mom is on at her age!

Do you know exactly how they did these weekly pill boxes? How often does her caregiver come? I'm wondering if they could put them together once a month but hide the weeks she is not on yet and just take out one box at a time?

$500 dollars a month is CRAZY! Especially for how simple her regime is! But your choices are very limited. I think it might be time to consider having mom move into AL or SNF, depending on her care needs.

I had looked at those automatic pill dispensers for my mom and felt exactly like you!
Best of luck.
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Reply to againx100
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