There is a facility here that mostly handles rehabs after hospital stays, but it also has a nursing home wing. My mother spent her 3 weeks hospital rehab in the nursing home wing because it had security for patients that wandered. Last time I was there they were building individual housing units on an adjoining property for assisted living too.
The nursing home wing let patients pretty much have the run of the place as long as they were in a wheel chair. The staff was great, but sorely underpaid. They put in heroic efforts with very difficult patients. They made sure everyone got out to eat meals in the dining room with everyone, if at all possible, rather than stay in bed---even quadriplegic patients. I could easily live there if I couldn't get around anymore.
I think nursing homes get a bad rap, in general. Some are good, some are probably bad. If you only listen to stories of patients, and don't listen to the other side of the story you get a bad impression. I saw very difficult patients there. Many of them were not telling the truth when they complained. For just a simple example, one lady at dinner, every evening, she would yell out complaining that no one was paying attention to her, and when a nurse came around she told the nurse, "Leave me alone!"

My mother never complained about anything there.
The question is, then, how do you make arrangements to go there, or a similar place, before you lose your mind.

It could be 20 years down the road. I guess I'm pretty adaptable. :shrug: I've never wanted to put anyone out, just because I prefer things to be just the way I want them. Hope that doesn't change.