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Mom is 88 and has stage 2 dementia. We had nurses in the home 5 days a week, 8 hrs a day. Mom fell and has been hospitalized for over a week. She is restrained because she scratches the nurses and pulls their hair. Mom also has other behavior issues that include spitting on people. The hospital is saying that no facility will take her with these behaviors. My brother has told the hospital they need to place her in a facility. She cannot return home. We can’t afford nurses 24/7. If I don’t move into my Mom’s home and take care of her, she’ll probably be sent to a facility anyway. Wondering if I should move into her home and take care of her. I don’t have any medical training. With her stage 2 dementia and behaviors, am I qualified to care for her?

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Do not pack up your life and move into your mother's house to become her live-in caregiver. Read some of the posts and responses on this forum. If you do, you won't move in with her. It will ruin your life.

As for this 'stage 2' dementia, what kind of dementia does she have? Is this behavior new since the hospital or has she been behaving this way to the nurses who come to her home for longer?
Talk to the homecare nurses or better still the homecare aides if she has them. They are the ones who spend the most time with her at home. They'd be able to tell you.

Also, the hospital is putting you on with saying no facility will take her with the behaviors. No fully-staffed care facility can handle her, but one person (you) with zero medical training and no backround in dementia caregiving is supposed to be able to. The hospital is only saying this because they want her out of there. Tell them she's an unsafe discharge there's no care at home. That will buy some time. You and your brother (why should he be off the hook?) can visit some LTC facilities for her. If you can't find one, the hospital will. Also, yes a memory care will take her. she will be medicated which is appropriate considering, but they will admit her.

In the meantime ask them to test her for a UTI and do some dementia testing. Then talk to her homecare people. You need a starting point in all of this and this is a good place to start.

You're not the answer to your mother's care needs or the reason why her behavior is what it is.
Helpful Answer (18)
Reply to BurntCaregiver
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Of course you are not qualified to care for your mom who has a horrible disease that will only continue to get worse. Nor should you.
You and you brother must now form a united front and make sure the hospital social worker knows that your mom is now an "unsafe discharge" and that under NO circumstances can she return home. Her doctor should be able to prescribe some medication to calm her behaviors so don't allow them to get off the hook so easily either. The doctors and the hospital must now do their jobs and find the appropriate facility for your mom.
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Reply to funkygrandma59
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No. Don't do this. You won't be able to control her, and neither she nor you will be safe. What medications is your mother on? Insist that the hospital work on getting your mother medicated to bring her behavior under control so that she can be admitted to a facility. There are specialists for this. Stand firm with your brother that she can't safely live at home anymore.
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Reply to MG8522
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Stardust Oct 8, 2025
I agree 100% with MG8! The hospital is telling you that no facility will take her, yet you're going to try to take this job on with zero qualifications? This is beyond your ability to manage.
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Absolutely do NOT move into mom’s house to take care of her! The fact that you are considering it tells me that you have no idea what you’d be required to do.

Taking care of a dementia patient is a full-time job that involves highly skilled care. You may think that because many people are taking care of a dementia patient at home that it’s easy-peasy, just jump in there and start watching them 24/7 and keep them from sitting in a wet diaper or putting the cat in the microwave and you’re having fun! Mom will eat everything you cook, never get mad (ha! they all get mad), and if it gets to be too much you can have a pleasant evening out while mom watches TV. It is nothing like that, which you’ll find out soon enough, and then you’ll have to get out of a mess that you never should have been in.

Mom needs 24/7 PROFESSIONAL care, and not in your house or hers. Please read past posts on here that tell it like it is and express the extreme misery of others who realized too late that they bit off more than they can chew, and their health and finances have suffered as a result.

I’m sorry you’re in this situation, and I hope you can escape before you become entangled in a caregiving nightmare that you never imagined.
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Reply to Fawnby
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100% NO

The behavior you describe does not sound like stage 2 dementia at all.

Please tell us if she's on any meds and if not, why not?

Has she been checked for a UTI?

How long ago was she hospitalized? She could have hospital "delirium" which is not unusual.

She is an "unsafe discharge"! Do not retrieve her no matter what they promise to you. She needs to go into the psych wing until she complies with meds and her behavior is under control. This is what they had to do for my 70-yr old cousin who had ALZ and a UTI: she scratched and fought. It was not her normal behavior for her phase. They held her in the psych wing for a month until she complied with meds and her behavior totally improved.
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Reply to Geaton777
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Stay here and read everything for two weeks.
Then come back and let us know if you learned anything, and what decisions you are considering after reading the forum daily for two weeks.

If you make this move, I personally feel it is extremely poor decision making on your own part. But whatever decision you make with and for your own life is in your own hands. You are a grownup. Consider moving into her home without giving up your own for a period of one month. That is another thing that would work well for informing yourself.

Whatever your decision, I do wish you best of luck.
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Reply to AlvaDeer
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No, you are not qualified to care for her.
Her care needs are more than you will be able to manage on your own. And believe me, you WILL be on your OWN! No one will want to help you, home caregivers will quit, and you will not be able to find a facility that will accept her.

Simply continue to refuse to allow her to be sent home. She will be unsafe on her own, and SHE HAS NO ONE TO TAKE CARE OF HER. You repeat that mantra to the hospital. The doctor will be forced to find a facility that can accept her. A social worker will probably get involved.
Do not let them guilt you, as they will try, because it is the easiest solution for them! Your brother is right.

I am in the position now of caring for my young, 63 yr old husband, who had a massive stroke which caused significant brain damage. He has similar behavior difficulties, and I am struggling with him, but I can't find a nursing home that will take him. They will only take the patient if you can control their behavior with medication. This has been a challenge for me because my husband responds negatively to medications, making him even more agitated. So, here I am killing myself trying to take care of him the best I can at home. I do the bare minimum for him at this point, because my body is breaking down, and I am so burned out. It is so much emotional stress!
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Reply to CaringWifeAZ
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JeanLouise Oct 14, 2025
So very sorry
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The hospital advice is wrong and cruel. This behavior needs full assessment and medication to calm it. It may take some time to find the right medicine or combination of meds. Understand that mom’s behavior might be as terrifying to her as it is for others to witness. There’s no way you can handle this on your own in a home setting, plus the dementia will only worsen as it sadly always does. Moving into her home is at best, a very temporary bandaid, one that will likely cost you dearly in your own wellbeing. Be very clear to the hospital staff that you’ll not have mom released until her behavior has calmed and a suitable next living arrangement is found. I wish you peace in such a difficult time
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Reply to Daughterof1930
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Having had some experience struggling with the emotional back and forth I had with my own self-conscience , DO NOT DO THIS. You will not only lose yourself in caregiving, you will lose your own independence, friends, family and will possibly resent her the longer it goes on. I only wish I could go back and say 'No' to get back all the time I have lost. Just because you love someone does not mean you have to take care of them. You are only responsible for taking care of your children and yourself when it comes down to it. She should be somewhere you can still be her daughter not her caregiver.
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Reply to laura9574
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No you are not. Your brother is saying the right thing to the hospital. It is their responsibility to find an appropriate placement for her. She likely needs drugs to help her calm down.
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