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Assisted
Living: Care With an Independent Flavor
by Nolo.com
From
the Nolo.com Retirement & Elder Care Center
Find
out what Assisted Living may have to offer -- and what to look for when evaluating
it as a new home.
Assisted living combines
much of the homelike atmosphere of independent living with some of the personal
care of a nursing facility. It provides extensive personal assistance and services,
plus round-the-clock monitoring, that are not offered by independent living
residences and that would be extremely expensive if arranged through home care.
On the other hand, assisted living permits residents to maintain some of the
privacy and independence that are lost in more institutional, and more expensive,
nursing facilities. Assisted living is the fastest growing type of seniors residence
-- fitting the needs of millions of seniors who cannot make it entirely on their
own, but who do not need full-time nursing care.
The residences discussed
here come under a variety of names: assisted living, sheltered care, residential
care, board and care, boarding home, catered living, congregate living and group
home. Although each facility or residence differs somewhat in the type of housing
and level of services and staffing provided, all of them, regardless of name,
have certain things in common. They provide:
- domestic services, including
meals and housekeeping
- assistance with personal
care and the activities of daily living, but not nursing care, and
- close monitoring to
help ensure residents' health and safety.
The Basics
Assisted living provides
a room or small apartment -- usually rented -- intended to help maintain a homelike
setting, plus a range of services to assist residents with those tasks of daily
life made difficult for them by the loss of some physical or mental capabilities.
Types of Living Spaces
There are several kinds
and sizes of assisted living housing: full-size one-bedroom apartments; studio
apartments with small kitchenettes; studios without a kitchen, or with a partial
kitchen that has no cooking facilities; single rooms; and shared rooms. An assisted
living apartment or room may be furnished or unfurnished. Even if a space is
furnished, at some places residents are permitted to bring in some furnishings
of their own, which can make a new place feel more like home.
Assisted living apartments
and rooms tend to be smaller than living spaces intended for the general public.
They are often fitted with safety devices such as handrails and special bathroom
fixtures, and may include a hospital bed if needed. In addition to the small
rooms and space-eating fixtures, people tend to bring more of their own furnishings
than would otherwise fit easily into the space. As a result, many assisted living
apartments feel crowded and even smaller than they are. It is often difficult
for a new resident to adjust to the smaller, more cramped quarters.
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Special Care for Alzheimer's or Disorientation |
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Many people
suffer mild symptoms from the early stages of Alzheimer's or other
age-related disorientation. Their need for monitoring and assistance
make independent living too difficult or dangerous, but they do
not need the high level of care provided by a nursing facility.
For them, assisted living is often an excellent solution.
However, the
kind of assistance these people need is different from that required
by those who have only physical limitations. The same assisted
living residence that provides good care for someone with only
physical frailties does not necessarily work well for a person
with mild dementia. Most assisted living facility administrators
will tell you that they are experienced with Alzheimer's residents.
But it is the quality of that experience that counts. Most important
is whether the staff is trained to handle the difficulties of
dementia sufferers. You want staff trained to provide special
attention to residents who are mildly disoriented -- not merely
to shuttle them from one place or activity to another, but if
necessary to explain what is going on, without treating the residents
as children.
If you are
considering an assisted living facility for someone with mild
disorientation problems, watch how the staff interacts with current
residents who have similar difficulties. And pay close attention
to how the staff -- not just the administrator who gives you a
tour -- interacts with you or your loved one during a meal, an
activity, or an explanation of facility rules.
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Services Provided
The main difference between
assisted living and independent living residences -- usually housing complexes
built or renovated for older residents who are basically able to care for themselves
-- is that assisted living meets a higher level of daily needs. While assisted
living does not offer either the medical care or the level of attention of a
nursing facility, it does provide personal care in a resident's living space
as well as common areas, meals and household tasks, and extensive monitoring
of each resident's physical condition.
Personal Assistance.
The reason most people move to assisted living is that they need help with one
or more of what are known as the Activities of Daily Living (ADLs). ADLs include
eating, bathing, dressing, continence and using the toilet, walking and getting
in and out of bed or chair.
An assisted living facility
will help a resident with any ADL, but not all the time, and not any time a
resident wants help. Instead, a schedule will be developed which takes into
account the resident's needs and the staff's availability. For example, an aide
might help a resident get in and out of bed in the morning, once or twice during
the day, at bedtime and once again during the night. Or a resident will be given
a full bath three or four times a week, but not every day.
When you consider a particular
assisted living residence, ask precisely what it offers regarding the specific
ADLs with which you need assistance. If the facility offers you the kind and
frequency of assistance you believe fits your needs, make certain that care
is spelled out in the written residence agreement you and the management sign.
Health monitoring.
In addition to help with daily activities, assisted living facilities monitor
a resident's health. That does not mean nursing or other active treatment of
a medical condition. Rather, it means keeping track of and helping the resident
take the correct dose of medications, helping the resident with self-administered
health aids such as prostheses and oxygen, providing emergency call systems
and checking on a resident's well-being during the night.
Most assisted living residences
have a nurse on duty to check on any resident who has health difficulty, or
whose physical condition seems to be changing, and to refer the resident for
medical care if it seems necessary. Health monitoring may also include coordinating
care with the resident's primary care physician and keeping track of a resident's
medical appointments. And most facilities provide or arrange transportation
to and from those appointments.
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Strict Rules Are a Problem for Some People |
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Assisted living
offers close monitoring of residents' physical conditions. This
includes keeping track of medications; checking on residents at
night and making sure residents eat properly. Assisted living
facilities accomplish this by setting up schedules and requiring
both staff and residents to follow them. Sometimes, these schedules
and rules are too restrictive for a competent, independent minded
person.
Depending
on your needs, including your need to be left alone, independent
living plus home care might fit your personality better than assisted
living -- even though that arrangement places the burden on you
and your family to organize care.
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Meals. One of the
most attractive things for many people about assisted living is that meals are
provided. There is a kitchen and a common dining room where at least two and
usually three meals a day are served, and their costs are part of the resident's
rent or fees. Residents are freed from shopping, cooking and cleaning up; they
are assured of nutritious food; and they are brought together for the informal
social exchange of a meal with other residents.
There are several things
to check about an assisted living residence's food service. First is how many
meals a day are included, and whether they are all full, hot meals. Then there
is the quality of the food; it won't do you any good if you won't eat it. Try
several meals in their dining room, and see if the residents seem interested
in their food and in each other.
Housekeeping. Assisted
living facilities provide laundry service and also clean individual rooms or
apartments. What that housekeeping includes, however, can vary considerably.
How often are a resident's bedding and bath linen laundered? Does the facility
do a resident's personal laundry as well? Is there an extra charge for personal
laundry? How often is an individual room or apartment cleaned?
Social activities and
exercise. It is one thing to assist residents with the basics of daily life
such as dressing and bathing; that help is guaranteed in a contract with an
assisted living residence. It may be quite another thing to help residents to
lead mentally, physically and socially active lives. This is not a matter of
contract, but of the fabric of service at a good residence. Most facilities
plan group activities such as guest lectures and exercise classes, as well as
regular gatherings for the residents to visit among themselves. The best facilities
also help individual residents participate in these activities to the extent
possible, and provide alternatives -- an assisted walk around the hallways,
for example, or a one-on-one chat in a resident's private room -- if it's not
feasible to participate in a group.
There are several ways to
get a sense of the quality of group and individual activities at a particular
facility. You can take a look at what is scheduled for any given week, but it
is also important to visit during one of these planned activities to see if
residents participate and seem to enjoy doing so. As for more individual attention,
find out whether there are any rules against staff spending non-scheduled time
with residents. And on all your visits, watch how the staff interact with residents:
look for a friendly, relaxed manner on both parts.
Costs
Most assisted living spaces
are rented, not purchased. The major exception is assisted living as part of
a continuing care community.
Basic Rent
Obviously, rent depends
on the size of living space. A small room with no cooking facilities is much
less than a spacious one-bedroom apartment with full kitchen. The rent also
varies with the amount of services and staff provided, the location and the
overall condition of the facility. And some facilities offer more than one type
of rental agreement: a limited contract may include fewer meals and personal
assistance than an inclusive or extensive agreement that includes all the services
the facility has to offer. Given all these variables, rent for an assisted living
unit generally runs 50% to 100% higher than for a comparable independent living
unit in the same facility. But they are still one-third to one-half the cost
of nursing facilities of the same quality, in the same area.
Rent Increases
As with any other rental
housing, you must consider how much your rent may go up over time. A lease can
guarantee the rent for a year or two. After that, rent increases are completely
up to the facility's ownership, unless a yearly limit is included in your rental
agreement. Without such a limit, it is important to check a facility's record
of rent increases over the previous five years. If they have raised rents in
large chunks, you have to consider whether they will price you out of your apartment
in years to come.
Additional Fees
Some assisted living facilities
charge fees in addition to rent. There may be a one-time non-refundable entrance
fee. And there may be a fee for certain services not included in the basic assisted
living contract: extra or delivered meals; extra housekeeping service; local
transportation fees; personal care beyond the standard level of care offered
in the facility.
©
2001 Nolo.com.
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