|
When Is It Time to Move Your Loved One to a Care Facility? |
|
By: Clare Absher RN, BSN
A family is often faced with the difficult decision of when it
is the right time to move a loved one to a care facility such as a assistive
living or possibly a nursing home.
Each family situation is very different and it may help
you to answer some of the following questions when considering this decision?
- Can your loved one move about safely in home including
negotiating stairs, getting in and out of bathroom and narrow
doorways?
- Have frequent falls become a problem recently and if so
is she/he willing and able to use an assistive device such as a walker or quad
cane?
- Does your loved one have and use necessary safety
equipment such as raised toilet frames, bath tub seats, and personal emergency
devices?
- Have any accidents occurred recently with appliances in
home such as the stove or forgetting to turn it off properly?
- If loved one smokes, has she or he had any accidents such
as burn holes in clothing or bedding?
- In the event of a fire, do you feel your loved one would
follow appropriate emergency measures including calling 911 and leaving
premises?
- Is your loved one bathing regularly and able to maintain
adequate hygiene including grooming such as hair washing, shaving and oral
care?
- Is your loved one changing clothes daily or has he or she
developed the habit of wearing the same dirty ones over and over
again?
- Has your loved one become progressively dependent with
more ADLs recently? (eating, dressing, bathing)
- Does you loved one allow outside help when needed to come
in and help with personal care, housekeeping chores, and meal
preparation?
- Are you able to find qualified home care assistants in
your area to relieve you of some caregiving responsibilities?
- Has he or she or become easily threatened or suspicious
of others, taking medications, or eating certain foods?
- Is your loved one eating properly, suffered recent weight
loss, dehydration or has simply refusing to eat become a problem?
- Is your loved one taking medications on schedule,
following correct dosages, and willing to use an organizer/reminder device if
necessary?
- Has your loved one gotten lost or unable to remember
personal information such as address, phone number, contacts that enable them to
return home?
- Are your caregiver duties causing you to be sleep
deprived, miss a lot of work, or be unable to manage other household
responsibilities?
- Is the amount of home care assistance needed likely to
become so great that it is not an affordable option for your
family?
- Is your loved one willing to participate in an adult day
care program to relieve some of family caregiving
responsibilities?
- As a primary caregiver, is your health at risk or neglect
of other family matters causing serious problems?
- As a primary caregiver, do you have the support you need and
are others in your family willing to help out?
Answering yes to some of these questions does not
necessarily mean that your loved one must be relocated to a care facility.
However if you determine that many of your answers are yes, then it is possible
that having your loved one remain at home is no longer a viable
option.
Source: carepathway.com
Heritage Enterprises Inc.
115 W.
Jefferson St., Suite 401
P.O. Box 3188 Bloomington IL 61702-3188
PH:
(309) 828-4361 FAX: (309) 829-5477
|