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First Day of MC

blacksparky
blacksparky Member Posts: 336
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I have finally got my MC facility choice down to the winner. Check in date is in about 10 days or so. I would have been #3 on the waiting list but just was informed that the #1 and #2 families weren’t ready so the room for my DW is available in about a week. For those of you who have your LO in MC, I just want to ask you how day one went for you.
Was it like a drop off and leave or did you stay for a bit and leave while staff redirected your LO. Was the transition easy or difficult for your LO and yourself. I will be going a couple of days earlier to set up the room with pictures and items from our home to make it maybe easier for my DW. I was also asked if I had a problem staying away for a few days while the staff works on getting my DW used to her new surroundings. I don’t have a problem with that. When you do visit has it been better in the morning or afternoon. When you leave each day do you say good bye or just kind of sneak out while staff redirects your LO. This is all so new and stressful for me and I’m working hard on double guessing my decision due to feeling guilty.
Thank you everyone…

Comments

  • Carl46
    Carl46 Member Posts: 1,611
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    I stayed for a while to visit with the admitting nurse. We went over her care needs, if anyone was barred from visiting, etc. Then I went home.

  • H1235
    H1235 Member Posts: 2,036
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    Setting the room up in advance is a great idea. When you visit just depends on your wife. If they are having trouble getting her to participate in activities, it might be good to go during that time so you can encourage her to go and maybe join her and help her feel more comfortable with it. If she participates willingly you might want to plan your visits so they don’t interfere with these activities. If she is not eating enough, it might be good to eat a meal with her so she can get some extra encouragement, or occasionally bring a favorite meal in for her. My mom is not a morning person, so I never visit in the morning. You might find she naps most days at a specific time, obviously you want to work around that. With a little trial and error you will find a routine that works for both of you. The facility probably has some kind of activity calendar you can ask for. My mom was very angry about the move, so there was no sticking around for a nice visit after.

  • BPS
    BPS Member Posts: 513
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    It is really hard to say. In our case I told my wife she was going to rehab. She was just getting out of rehab from a stroke, so it was an easy transition. I went in and helped her get settled and then told her I was leaving but would be back and then went back the next day. Time is different in dementia land, my wife has been there for over two years and thinks it has been a couple of weeks. I don't think there is a right way, all you can do is judge based on what you know at the time and what you know about her. It is all so hard. Trust your judgment and you will be wrong sometimes but she won't remember and we learn and move forward. Maybe not forward but we keep going.

  • SDianeL
    SDianeL Member Posts: 3,342
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    I also dropped my DH off for lunch. Stayed away 2 weeks. They let him call me every evening. The transition was smooth. I visited at lunch time. Stayed a couple of hours. Slipped out without saying goodbye. Told the nurse I was leaving. She would take him ice cream to distract him. When he asked to go home, I said when the doctor said so. He accepted that.

  • notequipped
    notequipped Member Posts: 53
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    I’m getting close but not quite where you are yet. If you don’t mind me asking, how did you decide on ‘the one’? Was it boxes that were checked or was it more of a feeling? It is such a stressful and exhausting time. Try not to feel guilty. I don’t think that any of our LO would want us to go through this. You’re doing what is best for both of you. I hope that the transition is an easy one for you and your DW.

  • blacksparky
    blacksparky Member Posts: 336
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    My DW is on Medi-Cal and part of the PACE program which is there to keep a LO at home as long as possible. What I found out was that when the person can’t stay home any longer, the program will help them transition to a MC facility. The program here has several facilities that they have approved for placement. I visited them all and chose the facility that I really liked. It was both from my gut feeling and the answers I had from the MC facilities. When walking through the facility that I chose, the residents looked happy, the staff came up to me and welcomed me, the place was clean and it just felt like the right fit. Also this one facility had great reviews. The nice thing about picking one of the facilities that were approved, was that all I have to pay is the room and board as the PACE program will continue to cover all my DW ‘s medical needs and supplies like pull ups, wipes etc. I’m hoping to get her moved in the next couple of weeks. It happened faster than I had planned. We were #3 on the waiting list but both families ahead of us weren’t ready so we shot up to #1. I’m not looking forward to the DAY that my LO enters the MC phase of this disease.

  • Dio
    Dio Member Posts: 918
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    I had set up the room in advance. On move-in day, a friend took him there for lunch to "check out the place." Then quietly left when staff took DH to the activity room. I didn't visit for a long while though. I was told he asked how long he needs to stay there, and on a later day asked whether he's going to die there. Over time, however, he acclimated well to the place.

    I was relieved when he was dropped off smoothly, and staff confirmed he went to bed fine. For the first time in a long time I was able to have a good night's sleep myself. Guilt didn't hit me until I visited and saw conditions of the other residents in memory care…so sad. I get depressed every time I visit, seeing how a life marches to its end, a slow march in an almost empty shell for many of them. Is this it? Is this how life ends for people afflicted with this dreadful disease? I know I shouldn't be thinking like this, but I just can't shake off the sadness.

    Best of luck for a smooth placement/transition for your LO.

Commonly Used Abbreviations


DH = Dear Husband
DW= Dear Wife, Darling Wife
LO = Loved One
ES = Early Stage
EO = Early Onset
FTD = Frontotemporal Dementia
VD = Vascular Dementia
MC = Memory Care
AL = Assisted Living
POA = Power of Attorney
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