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My dad has been in care home for assessment over a number of weeks. He is now to be discharged home with carers in place but there are no carers doing community visits at the moment according to social work so, they are wanting to put him residential care for the time being but struggling to get somewhere. Dad has vascular dementia and doing brilliant, he’s fully independent. We are wanting to bring him here as we have loads of room for him but social work have only advised we didn’t but it’s our decision I just don’t know what to do for the best. The place he is in at the moment is pure hell 😢

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Where are you, Shona?

If the care home he's in were that dreadful, would he be doing so well there after several weeks?

The trouble with bringing him to your home - do you mean to live with you? - would be that if anyone in the household got ill you would have to deal with isolating that person, PLUS "shielding" your vulnerable father. It would be a heck of a challenge.
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Shona49 Mar 2020
Yeah to live me temporary til carers are getting back to community. I’m in UK I feel if he was moved to residential care he would be more at risk and with his dementia it could or probably would knock him back 😊
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Yeah to live me temporary til carers are getting back to community. I’m in UK I feel if he was moved to residential care he would be more at risk and with his dementia it could or probably would knock him back 😊
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What ought to happen is that he stays where he is until - well, until the restrictions are relaxed. Why is there talk of moving him at all for now?
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Shona49 Mar 2020
He’s being discharged as he doesn’t need nursing care and they need the room for patients that need it. It’s only an assessment unit 😊
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I would ask that he be tested and u too. If negative, I see no problem with bringing him to ur house till this is over. I would bring none of his things into the house until you can wipe them down. Wash all his clothes again. Bring nothing from the facility that they supplied to Dad.
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Shona49 Mar 2020
Thank you JoAnn that’s my thinking too x
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Shona the reason I asked where you are (just roughly) is that it makes such a difference what part of the country and which local authority.

It isn't something I'd recommend, but where I am we certainly are seeing elders discharged to their homes alone and we certainly are providing support - I'm about to go out on my round!

You say your father is in a care home for assessment, then say it's only an assessment unit and he's being discharged because he doesn't need nursing care - so I'm a little confused, whose care is he under? Is this an NHS rehab unit - didn't know there still were any! - or a community hospital or what?

I still think it's a bad idea to bring him into your home unless:

you already have substantial experience of caring for him day to day and know that you can cope
"loads of room" includes enough physical rooms for him to live separately from the rest of you if need be
your home is well located for access to health and food delivery services

Any children in the house?
Do you have LPA for him?
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Shona49 Mar 2020
Good morning 😊 dad was moved from the hospital rehabilitation for a further 6 week assessment due to delirium so they put him in a nursing home which has a rehab unit for assessing dementia patients and it’s NHS. Dad would have his on living space and all on the same level. I worked with dementia patients for years and I am sure he would get on much better with family around, he just wants out of the place and cry’s for his family. I do have LPA and I have 2 kids 16 and 10, we live walking distance to shops etc. Social work suggested this at first but then called to say they didn’t think it was a good idea. I have spoken to some of my x colleagues that still work in nursing and community and they all say bring him home he would be much safer with me, I really I’m struggling with this, I want to make the right decision for him. 😊
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Well.

If your kids are being really, really good about social distancing. AND if you're able to "shield" your dad, especially with things like explaining why the kids need to keep their distance. And if you have looked ahead and are confident you're not going to get more than you bargained for permanently (e.g. if it then becomes extremely difficult either to get him to his own home, or to find residential care for him)...

On the whole, yes, I think he'd be safer and happier with you. But what about the rest of the family?
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