Hello Bob...
My name is Gia and I have only just join this forum yesterday - but I was looking around and I find this topic that you post. (Please excuse me - English is my second language). I do not have an answer for you - but I can tell you that you situation with you parents is parallel to my friend.
We also living in Massachusetts, and her parents are in Coral Spring, Florida. Her father have early-mid stage Alzheimer disease, and her mother also is beginning to decline (mentally) from all the stress of caring for him. They also have aides who coming to they house, and it is very apparent that they both will need to make the move to a safer environment. The aides situation is not terrific - there have been new ones replacing others frequently, and problems with loss of personal items. But - the situation itself is same thing - the mother is adamant that she will not retorn to live in "cold-state" Massachusetts.
My friend have get in touch with an advocate in they county, and the advocate will (this week, actually) pay a visit to them to do an assessment and make a report back to my friend. My friend (Paula) wishes to place them in to an Assisted Living facility near her home here in MA...the father will eventually need to be place in the Alzheimer unit for his own safety, and the mother will have opportunity to relax and still see him on a daily basis while her own needs are attend to. No more worry about cooking and leaving stove burner on alone is worth it to my friend.
BUT - if they can not be convince to move "back home" they will at least be place in a facility where they will be safe. The thought is that the advocate will speak with the mother about making a move to a safe environment and convince her that it is vital. Generally, they (elderly) will understand and respond more ready to an advocate even more than one of they children.
The advocates deal with this issue on a daily basis, and they know what work and what not work. I know how difficult it is - I have been watching Paula stress over this issue for months now....and she is anxious for the report and recommendation by the professional who will observe and speak with her parents. (Paula and her husband Jim are not willing OR able to move closer to the parents - they own children and grandchildren are here in the north...moving down to FL was her parents dream, not Paula & Jim's)..... Believe it or not, many of the cases are Florida parents vs. out of state children, so they know what and how to proceed. (It has become a secondary job for professionals...this out-of-stare conferencing.)
I wish you all the best of luck...I know this is so difficult and I wish I can give to you a more definite and straight forward answer - but I just wanted you to know that you certainly are not alone out there....SO many of our generation are going through this with our parents. I was fortunate to be able to care for my parents in my own home until they just had to go to a nursing care facility....and then they was not there for very long before they pass.
It is very important that you speak to the correct people as quickly as possible. It generally take a frightening crisis for the caregiver (in you case, you wife's Mama) to make the decision for accepting help. The advocate is able to show drama-acted videos of a spouse who take the car and was discover driving at night time in heavy traffic - the car was stop in the middle of the highway. Very dangerous, obviously.....but when they see that "OH MY" moments, it begin to take shape in they minds that yes, some thing can happen and I am alone and can not stop it by my self. In other word - REALITY is presented to them.
Most of these couples own they own homes and that require selling and disperse of they belongings...so much to think about - but it is they safety that is the most important. I know you know that.... believe it or not, this will all work out for you...and I wish you and you wife and you in-laws all the very best. You are not alone.... From Gia.
My name is Gia and I have only just join this forum yesterday - but I was looking around and I find this topic that you post. (Please excuse me - English is my second language). I do not have an answer for you - but I can tell you that you situation with you parents is parallel to my friend.
We also living in Massachusetts, and her parents are in Coral Spring, Florida. Her father have early-mid stage Alzheimer disease, and her mother also is beginning to decline (mentally) from all the stress of caring for him. They also have aides who coming to they house, and it is very apparent that they both will need to make the move to a safer environment. The aides situation is not terrific - there have been new ones replacing others frequently, and problems with loss of personal items. But - the situation itself is same thing - the mother is adamant that she will not retorn to live in "cold-state" Massachusetts.
My friend have get in touch with an advocate in they county, and the advocate will (this week, actually) pay a visit to them to do an assessment and make a report back to my friend. My friend (Paula) wishes to place them in to an Assisted Living facility near her home here in MA...the father will eventually need to be place in the Alzheimer unit for his own safety, and the mother will have opportunity to relax and still see him on a daily basis while her own needs are attend to. No more worry about cooking and leaving stove burner on alone is worth it to my friend.
BUT - if they can not be convince to move "back home" they will at least be place in a facility where they will be safe. The thought is that the advocate will speak with the mother about making a move to a safe environment and convince her that it is vital. Generally, they (elderly) will understand and respond more ready to an advocate even more than one of they children.
The advocates deal with this issue on a daily basis, and they know what work and what not work. I know how difficult it is - I have been watching Paula stress over this issue for months now....and she is anxious for the report and recommendation by the professional who will observe and speak with her parents. (Paula and her husband Jim are not willing OR able to move closer to the parents - they own children and grandchildren are here in the north...moving down to FL was her parents dream, not Paula & Jim's)..... Believe it or not, many of the cases are Florida parents vs. out of state children, so they know what and how to proceed. (It has become a secondary job for professionals...this out-of-stare conferencing.)
I wish you all the best of luck...I know this is so difficult and I wish I can give to you a more definite and straight forward answer - but I just wanted you to know that you certainly are not alone out there....SO many of our generation are going through this with our parents. I was fortunate to be able to care for my parents in my own home until they just had to go to a nursing care facility....and then they was not there for very long before they pass.
It is very important that you speak to the correct people as quickly as possible. It generally take a frightening crisis for the caregiver (in you case, you wife's Mama) to make the decision for accepting help. The advocate is able to show drama-acted videos of a spouse who take the car and was discover driving at night time in heavy traffic - the car was stop in the middle of the highway. Very dangerous, obviously.....but when they see that "OH MY" moments, it begin to take shape in they minds that yes, some thing can happen and I am alone and can not stop it by my self. In other word - REALITY is presented to them.
Most of these couples own they own homes and that require selling and disperse of they belongings...so much to think about - but it is they safety that is the most important. I know you know that.... believe it or not, this will all work out for you...and I wish you and you wife and you in-laws all the very best. You are not alone.... From Gia.