ronk said:We have put LPA in place for my daughter should she ever need it - Its facing the potential of that dreadful situation.
:happyclap: That makes it so much easier on a practical level Ronk, good move...
ronk said:We have put LPA in place for my daughter should she ever need it - Its facing the potential of that dreadful situation.
john-e89 said:gov said:Thanks for kind thoughts and advice - the cost of care is what it is - the important thing is as everyone says to keep her safe - we're hoping to convince her to achieve this she needs 24hr care - for her sake and my wife's state of mind . Today the hospital has said at some point we will have an open meeting with my wife and I present to decide whether she needs full time care or go home with carers but if they assess mum's mental state as being okay her decision will be final ie if she insists she wants to go home then so be it - obviously my priority is with my wife's state of mind .
I “tricked” my mum into it Gov, after yet another fall and a stay in hospital I said she needed a month in a home for respite care to let her get her strength back, after a few months of “When am I going home” she accepted she was now in her new home, and it’s been the best thing for her, and maybe selfishly for me, I’d done all I could and the initial guilt has gone now, she’s so well looked after. Time is of the essence with your M-in-law, you don’t need advice from me as you know all this but the sooner you get it dealt with the better, especially with dimentia, it’ll only get harder to deal with, try not to feel guilty, you will but try, it’s for the best for all of you, especially your wife’s health. I wish you all the best.
Yes this is the strategy we will adoptfortunately we do have LPA
john-e89 said:I’ve come away in tears so many times from the home Mr T thinking what an absolute s**t I am for putting her in there, but when you step back and look at it rationally keeping her at her old house was the bad thing to keep doing, private carers only go so far and you need to pick up so much slack don’t you, I needed to live there to give her everything she needed, not an option on so many levels, a year and a half in I now see how much better things are for her as you will, it’s an awful situation for so many folk isn’t it.
gov said:Mum in law is 94 and in the early stages of dementia - my wife is an only child so everything falls on us - mum has lived alone for the past 15 years but the last year has been horrendous with several stays in hospital after falls and several weeks in respite - she is in hospital again now after complaining of acute back pain that we believe may be in her imagination ( although real to her ) She's had xrays that show nothing wrong ! We've worked really hard to keep her at home but the time is fast approaching when she'll need 24hr care - the system as everyone knows is that all her savings will be used to fund her care - this should last about 6 months then her house will be sold to pay the costs - we've been to several care homes and the costs average £900 a week - when the money finally runs out we will be expected to pay the top up fees of around £1k a month as the council will only pay £600 - and what happens if the house takes a long time to sell ? Bloody nightmare - my wife and I are 71 and all we want at our time of life is peace .
I know no one can do anything but my ranting has helped![]()
Tony
ronk said:When we were in this position we discovered that nursing care should be provided and paid for by the state!
They did not volunteer that information to us!