It is vital to ensure your loved ones’ comfort, quality of life, and well-being. The following blog explores the signs that hint to you that it is time your loved ones should leave their current assisted living.
Care Not Meeting Needs
It is vital for your loved ones’ needs to be fulfilled. If your loved ones’ assisted living community is unable to provide the type or degree of care your loved ones need immediately away, locate another licensed skilled assisted living community that can.
Team members of a registered skilled assisted living community will monitor your loved ones’ health and vital signs, take care of any medication requirements, provide physical therapy and restorative nursing programs, as well as help with toileting, bathing, dressing, and feeding as necessary.
Steadily Increasing Fees
Keep an eye out for expenditures that are increasing fast to meet demand since they may increase and cost more than a community with a license to provide skilled nursing care. Several assisted living communities charge more for “higher levels of care” that can go beyond what they are trained to deliver.
In addition, many assisted living communities insist that loved ones pay privately for a one-on-one team member as their health care needs increase. All too frequently, when your loved ones’ finances run out, they may be simply told that the existing community can no longer meet their needs.
If your monthly cost is $6,000 or more, just balance the benefits against the drawbacks. Despite the fact that these increased prices may appear to be tied to your loved ones’ increasing needs, it is possible that your loved ones are not getting the confirmed effective, safe, competent, and comprehensive treatment they need in exchange for those larger payments.
You should make the decision on whether a licensed skilled assisted living community is a better option than the existing assisted living community, at least six to twelve months before all available funds are depleted.
Asked to Hand Over All Their Wealth
The whole estate of your loved ones, including their money, assets, properties, for instance, should never be liquidated and committed to any community. Despite the attractiveness of “aging in place” or continuing to spend your life via a series of dwellings on the same location, one never knows what fate has in store.
What would happen if your loved one felt unhappy or needed to relocate because they were not receiving the qualified care they required? What if it becomes essential to shut down the community due to a disaster that could not have been predicted? Being confined to one community permanently could also start to feel more uncomfortable than convenient.
Therefore, approach with extreme caution and wait to sign any agreements until you have spoken with your family if the administration of the assisted living community wants your loved ones to pledge all of their assets.
Not only will you and your loved ones commit to this arrangement, but your loved ones’ lifestyle alternatives will also be constrained by the financial obligations.
Conclusion
Assisted living communities can meet some of the needs of your loved ones. However, when your loved ones’ needs increase and the expenditures start to rise quickly, be careful to immediately get the best, most costly expert care you can afford.