Elder-caregivers
Related: About this forumHow to find in-home help for dad?
Hes still doing what he wants at nearly 90. Mowing, cleaning, cooking... hes a fantastic driver and until my mom died last year, was mentally at about 95%, just forgot a few things occasionally. In the last year, hes started forgetting things, losing words and names, the normal senior stuff. He recognizes it and has me go over important papers and bills.
He was on the roof last week cleaning gutters and sealing his screened in porch roof. 🙄 Told me later that night. But Ive decided that if he keels over mowing his lawn, painting his cabin or falls off a roof then hes gone on his own terms doing what makes him happy.
We arent to the point of needing help yet, but I am researching and unless he has a catastrophic fall, I plan to keep him in his home as long as I can. We may move in, if needed. Its the least I can do for the grumpy old bastard.
So, who has used the big national in-home companies? Any recommendations or places to steer away from? My aunt was in a Catholic facility (and it didnt burn down with the Baptist moving in) and I want him to be there if worst comes to worst. (At nearly 90, I see being in a home worse than death and he does, too.)
Thank you!
DeminPennswoods
(16,238 posts)Don't know what state you are in, but it seems states are moving toward paying for care at home rather than in nursing homes, too. Medicare will pay for hospice care at home as well.
My dad was similar to yours, always doing, until he couldn't. If it means anything, I applaud you for trying to keep your dad at home.
Blue_playwright
(1,573 posts)He has railroad union retirement pension and fantastic insurance. Few restrictions on elder care. Moms last three months cost more than a quarter million dollars- Dad paid $250 for some fancy new medicated shakes. And they have now added those shakes to their coverage after dealing with Mom and at least one other railroad wife in the past year.
So money is literally no object. Thank goodness for unions.
DeminPennswoods
(16,238 posts)My dad was also retired RR under RR retirement, but covered under my mom's teacher's union insurance.
Blue_playwright
(1,573 posts)Nt
deek
(3,414 posts)I have recruited people from our college by posting flyers. CNAs or nurses in training make terrific in-home care workers. Sometimes people who are not in those fields work out extremely well too. It depends upon their personality and work ethic, which you can try to assess during an interview.