We recently placed my father in a memory care facility. The facility we found is small and provides all the care we feel he needs.
My issue is we never get any sort of update on my father unless we stop by to see him or email questions on how he is doing.
I realize now I should have asked this question during our process of finding the right facility.
Am I wrong to have expected the facility would provide more updates on how my father is doing?
I KNOW he is getting better care there than when he had to rely on me 24/7. Whenever I visit/call, I sincerely thank whomever is there for their excellent care. He is 20 miles away and I wish I could have found a spot closer to home for more frequent visits, but this AFH is the best one for him and I have full confidence in them. I truly wish all you caregivers out there the best in finding the place that works for you and your LO. Peace of mind has no price.
I am one of 6 children (my mother has passed away) so at a minimum we are visiting my father 2-3x a week. He doesn't ask to call us as he doesn't remember he has any children.
My issue is our calls to the facility (he is one of 8 residents in a memory care home) go unanswered, or the mailbox for the person who manages the house isn't set up, another staff members mailbox is full, appointments are set up online to visit then when we arrive we are told - we should have called first (yet the phone isn't answered). Extensive forms we submitted with all of my father's health and personal information seem to have never been delivered to the staff. It's these types of things I find worrisome, but not much more we can do than keep visiting and making sure he's OK.
Also please know we fully understand the care of the staff at this facility is paramount to us. It's a learning curve now for us on how to navigate this new stage of care for our father.
I am going to call and ask if we can schedule some sort of follow up "care meeting". I like that idea.
What do you want them to report on exactly? Are you visiting on a regular basis to check on him? I strongly suggest that you do....even the best of places are short staffed right now and you don't want your dad slipping thru the cracks.
My mom's facility DOES call, at times, with updates. But, not as frequently as I would like. So, I make sure to communicate with them.
If I see or hear anything concerning, I contact THEM. I visit in person often, and I also see my mom via Google Duo. I listen and observe how the staff treats not only my mom, but the other residents.
I'm fairly confident that they are doing their best, but things can slip by, since they are understaffed.
So, can you expect updates? It depends on your facility.
going well and your LO ok and we’ll cared for. Can’t wait for care home to call you !!!
but think you would know that
Have you tried calling and asking about him?
Decisions around caregiving: If you could go back in time and could put your loved one in a facility, would you do it? Don't trust assisted living what they say they will do. I would never trust nursing homes.
Until nursing home assisted living make their facilities safety has or will change I would not recommend seniors to go there. For the reason listed below.
COVID-19 tore through long-term care facilities across the country, accounting for a third of coronavirus deaths during the first year of the pandemic. Tragic tales of deaths due to problems with testing, personal protective equipment and infection control emerged at state veterans’ homes in Massachusetts, New Jersey, and Texas.
The inspector general’s report on the VA Illiana Health Care System in Danville is the first to publicly detail extensive breakdowns at a facility operated by the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs. The agency runs a system of 134 nursing homes that serve roughly 9,000 veterans a day across 46 states, the District of C
An examination by the Government Accountability Office in June found there were 3,944 cases and 327 deaths among residents of VA nursing homes from March 2020 through mid-February. The cumulative case rate among residents was 17% and the death rate was 1%.
Those numbers are miniscule compared to nursing homes nationwide, where researchers estimate there were 592,629 cases and 118,335 deaths last year. The death rate among long-term care residents as of March was 8%, according to the COVID Tracking Project
You didn't do anything wrong in picking the MC facility your father is in.
No care facility, even a top-shelf one, is going to make a wellness call or email just to tell a family member everything is good. They should do this, but no one does.
The
Keep communication regular with the facility and set the tone and convey your expectations. Write well thought out letters for his care and wishes as often as needed.
Best of luck!
The "no less than every 90 days" contact is called a "care plan meeting" and with COVID these generally are conference calls now of about 15 minutes. The unit nurse will review all meds Rx and OTC meds, labs and any care plan changes upcoming. They generally try to have your loved one on this call too (depending on their capacity to understand). And as your loved one's representative, you can ask questions and suggest new medical things that may be considered and/or warranted. Then the social worker usually takes over and reviews things such as activities and social adjustment or not. Sometimes others may be on the call too -- the dietician, a PT or OT provider -- if there is something specific any of them need to raise. But any of the previously noted folks on the health care team will take a call (not like one should call every day and waste their time) and they will answer questions.
I have had several one-on-one calls with the dietician, as my mom was not eating well and we had to work on several ideas to try to resolve that and now my mom gets to pick her food options a week in advance rather than having something delivered to her room that she does not like. Yes, previously she would get to pick from two options for lunch and dinner daily, but that was too many decisions every day and she'd forget to do it by the 11 am deadline. So the solution was for an aide to help her on Saturday, to pick all choices for the upcoming week all at one time. And we also worked on more "finger food/bite sized" options as she only has the use of one arm, so if food needs to be cut she cannot realistically eat it.
I think they are more open to more regular calls at the beginning of a placement as obviously this is all new for you and for your loved one. Over time, and as things settle down, I have found the communication wanes (frankly is not necessary) unless there is a "change in status." ANYTIME there is a "change in status" I get a call from the floor nurse if something simple: "we are doing labs this week," "your mom is getting her flu vaccine this week," "we added a new Rx as your mom has a UTI, it is Y Rx and Z dosage and she will take it for 2 weeks."
If there is any major medical "change in status" her assigned physician at the facility calls me, like when my mom tested positive for COVID the first week of Jan. I have also found that my mom's assigned physician (a board certified geriatrician and internist) as well as the other MDs on her team (geriatric psychiatrist, the psychologist, and the neurologist) all will call me back if I have questions (not many now) but there was a lot of communication early when my mom was first placed AND following the workup an diagnosis for dementia.
And now with the Omicron outbreak at my mom's nursing home that started the first week of Jan., I get a robo call any day there is a new positive case be that among the residents, the staff OR vendors. Somewhat anyone, but I have gotten used to it now as there has been a daily call almost every day since 1/3/22. And they post the actual number of confirmed cases and cases recovered on their website so you can see just how bad it is. They went from 5 in early Jan to over 50 within 3 week, but now it is 1 or 2 so thankfully dropping. The website also posts the % of fully vaccinated and boosted among residents, staff and vendors too which is about 98% for all of them. The post their COVID-death number too if any and thankfully just one since Jan.
All to say, the amount of communication depends on the facility, your loved one and what is going on with him/her and there.
To be honest these Nurses don't have the time to keep families updated on every little thing. If you don't hear anything, in my opinion, that is a good thing. You would not believe the records they need to keep for the State. Care plans have to be set up.
And yes, there are residents who are left off and forgotten. My daughter has even said there r families that will do anything to keep someone alive because them dying means they no longer have that persons SS check to help with the families expenses. So sad.
Any property or other assets the person may have owned must be sold and liquidated to go towards their facility care bill. Unless of course they had the good sense to take assets out of their name when they were getting up their in age. If they didn't, that goes for facility care.
I don't know what nursing home or MC your daughter is talking about who lets a family keep the resident's SS check.
I think you should ask for such a care conference meeting with your father's Memory Care and see if they're amenable to such a thing. Otherwise, call over there to your heart's content for updates, as I do.
There are two things that matter: #1 is the facility keeping complete and accurate records? (probably, yes) #2 are they happy to answer any questions and give updates when requested, and when they do this do they also sound as if they know which resident they're talking about?
And why isn't it done routinely? Well, some (one) of the reasons are (is) really obvious, and that's lack of time. To provide routine updates to all persons on each client's list of nominated contacts would occupy many staff hours AND would either mean giving an administrator access to confidential information which s/he would not normally have, or would present a task for caregivers or nursing staff which (with all respect and love to my coworkers) is likely to be beyond their communication skills (especially if you're expecting anything in writing).
Even more sadly, and it still makes me well up to think of it, not all families want to know. I will not forget sitting with my sister during a respite care assessment and being asked by the (best I have ever, ever met) manager if we wished to be contacted with updates about our mother. "Of course!" we chimed, "who wouldn't?" "You'd be surprised," she said quietly.
And then there are of course those residents who have no one to inform.
So. All in all, no it isn't routine. But you can always ask for the name of a nominated contact, and call in for updates at agreed intervals, no?
I think asking to be kept updated is asking them to take away from the actual care required or hire another staffer, both have negative consequences.
Go visit as often as possible and don't worry about them calling you. If you are curious, pick up the phone and call.
The only way I could monitor my mom’s was to live 1/2 block from the facility and go there every day. When I started her on 5day a week M-F hospice, I went in on Saturday and Sunday.