Mother currently in an AL facility. Her medical condition will now require 24/7 supervision with private caregiver. The cost for that is insane, so we are considering renting an apartment and privately employing a live-in companion. Good idea? Bad idea? Shared experiences? All new to us, so any insight and advice appreciated. Thanks!
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I live in a nice apartment complex. Decided to move her there. Bigger place. With a garage $1700/month. all maintenance, pest control, trash collection, utils, included. All on auto-pay. Best maintenance staff ever. Has social events she actually goes to because it's uplifting, not a bunch of old people staring at each other. Sits out by the pool almost every day. Payment is setup automatically. I bought / installed accessible things. Use Care.com and found qualified caregivers. NEVER have a live in. It may be slightly less expensive, but you get far better care with hiring more than one. Unlike an agency, I get to pre-screen/qualify caregivers. I've got four great caregivers who provide 24 hour care. I use Care.com's Homepay to pay taxes. So easy. Texas doesn't require workers comp, but policy wasn't expensive. I am now in charge of what she eats, and she gets great low carb, high protein, food that's easy to fix or pre-prepare.
Mom was declining in the AL/Nursing home environment. Anyone would. VERY depressing. People constantly being carted off in ambulances. Staff is nice to your face, but will treat your loved one poorly. We've reduced cost by about $5,000/mo. with Apt. So much less stress for me. I don't have to deal with myriad of staff. I can fire the caregivers if they don't work. You can't fire staff at a NH or AL! She's not that social, but she sees people daily. In AL/NH she rarely left the room. Goes out for walks with caregiver in her wheelchair daily & sees people. We go to weekly things like PT/church. So much less stress on me. I don't have to worry she'll be kicked out or that she will be neglected or pay for care she's not getting. Don't have staff calling every 15 minutes about her. And she's now doing things for herself and is much better off physically. She gets meds on time, eats right, exercises and I can spend time with her without stressing. Place is easy to clean. It takes planning, but it's FAR better than any 'place'. Not for everyone but best decision I've made. Would NEVER place her in NH or AL. Those places really don't 'supervise'. She can age in place here. Gets better care. Eats better, etc. You cannot pick the caregivers at any of these places. That's really the key. And there's lots of great private caregivers out there. They just don't work for agencies
Preach, my friend. Everything you're saying is the honest truth.
You'll need more than a companion. A companion generally will not handle bathroom duties. You'll need at least two caregivers, one live-in and another one or two for reliefs. They should at least be CNAs. Add to that managing the things that make a home - paying rent, handling water bills, electric bills, pest control and so on. Then insurance and withholding taxes for all employees, and all of the foregoing will take a lot of your time and energy.
Your caregivers will want and need some time off. Living in an apartment with a seriously ill old woman is not going to appeal to most. They may want weekends off so they can go home and tend to things.
Leave her where she is. I don't know why she needs 24/7 in an AL facility with a private caregiver. She may be ready for a nursing home.
I'm sorry you're going through this.
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Your plan is undoable imo. Plus, you can wind up spending MORE this way and getting LESS.
Look and see if Morningstar Assisted Living exists in your area. Although AL, they accommodate more needy residents who require a LOT more care than traditionally offered in regular AL. It's like a cross between AL and Skilled Nursing. Yes, it's more expensive but probably no more so than in home 24/7 proper care. Plus doctors come in house and meds are done on each patient.
Good luck to you
As others here have mentioned, a live-in companion would be doing the work of 3-shifts a caregivers per day. One person doing all that work will burn out very quickly. Then you are back to square one looking for a new companion. Plus a "companion" cannot handle your Mom's medication, you would need to do that.
Renting an apartment you have the monthly rent, furnish the apartment like that of a nursing home [hospital bed, etc], purchase renter's insurance, plus the companion is now an "employee", either you or your Mom will need to get "workman's comp" in case the employee gets hurt on the job. And all the accounting involved with payroll.
I would recommend looking for a Skilled Nursing Home. I hope you aren't paying for all of this, as it can take a huge bite out of one's savings.
I went to grab a quick bite in the hospital cafeteria. I picked out a sandwich and my bottle of water and sat at a table to eat.
There was an elderly woman with her private sitter getting ready to be seated to eat as well. I would hire this person in a heartbeat. She treated this older woman in a wheelchair with so much warmth, kindness and respect.
I could instantly tell that the older woman was completely comfortable with her sitter. She was the kind of person that all of us would dream about sitting with our mothers.
When our children are young we guard them with our lives. When our parents grow old we want to be strong advocates for them so they will receive the very best care.
We want caregivers who will allow our parents to retain their dignity. I saw that in the sitter at the hospital yesterday.
When my children were young and I was concerned about finding a good sitter so my husband and I to go out by ourselves occasionally, a friend of mine gave me excellent advice. She said that if I were ever to take turns with another mom watching each other’s children to watch carefully how she treated her own children. I never forgot her advice. She said that if the other mom was rotten to her children that she would be rotten to mine too.
I think this advice applies in any kind of caregiving. If an individual cares for their own parents well, either themselves or by being an excellent advocate for them, they are going to be responsible with your parents.
In your particular situation, I still vote for facility care, but if you do decide on a private caregivers, be very selective about the people that will be staying with your mom day in and day out. Also, install cameras. A picture is worth a thousand words.
Staying in Al with the care you are told she needs doesn't make sense to me. Sounds like a nursing home is more in line or if it is dementia related MC.
A home that has a step up program is where we placed both my mother & step-mother. Step-mother was in AL now in MC, my mother at 98 is still in AL, doing fine, very healthy over all for 98, and her mind is sharp.
Something to consider with a live-in is who relieves the live-in when they are fatigued? Who watches patient when live-in needs to go on errands? When does the live-in get a day off?
My concern with live-ins is their burnout and how patient care is affected. I think at a certain point the care needs to be implemented by a team of persons. I speak from my experiences and what we went through with my moms care.
Good luck. This is a difficult journey.
I operate a homecare business. We can provide round-the-clock service but never live-in. No one should ever allow a client's home to become their residence. Always a bad idea.
I'm glad it's working out for your mom at home. I was a private-pay caregiver for years. This can be great for a person to keep them home. You did right hiring more than one caregiver.
It all depends on what their conditions are. Sometimes they need nursing home care or memory care.