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Aassisted living usually means a couple of hours of care each day. You might try paying for some in home care. You might also look into IL facilities and ask if there are private caregivers that have several clients in the place. I could hold off my mom going to MC because a care agency had so many clients that someone would come in for bathing and medication supervision x2 each day. They charged in 15 minute intervals
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Reply to MACinCT
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In general there is a gap for those that can not afford assisted living but are not “ bad enough “ for a skilled nursing home .
Most people in AL are using up savings , sell a home , cash in investments.

My sister was never good with money and she had two lousy abusive husbands . All she has is social security. Her son took her in 10 years ago , and they are in the same spot , waiting for her to “ get worse “.

I’m sorry . I could see where it is often suggested that an elderly person should go into assisted living ( based on their care needs ) , but we often don’t know the finance situation . In some states Medicaid will pay for assisted living . I don’t know which states those are .
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Reply to waytomisery
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My parents made a combined monthly income of about $1500 from Social Security when they went into Assisted Living. A pittance compared to what your mom makes alone! They sold off their stocks and their home and used the proceeds to fund their stay in AL, as most seniors do. Dad also received Aid and Attendance benefits from the VA for being a soldier in WWII which helped pay their bill.
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Reply to lealonnie1
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I see you are new here, and welcome. When you are around more you will see that we don't say ALF so much as we say "into in-facility care". That may mean board and care, nursing home, assisted living, and it may mean with savings, but more often, as surely you read here, it means application for medicaid.

Without pretty much a life time of good luck and savings, no one can afford the creme de la creme of care today.

My brother spent his life as a waiter. So not a lot of money in that at all, but his hobby was buying homes in lucky times in San Francisco, downtrodden old glories and bringing them back to their glorious youth, then selling and getting another that needed love. All his life, as we were taught, he saved, even to clipping coupons.

This ended him up, at 85, with, as I loved to taunt all the ALFs that wanted him, about 1M on the hoof. Farmers will know the expression.
His monthly income was miniscule. Only made at the highest about SS from Social Security. My Dad was always right; he should have reported ALL HIS TIPS, hee hee.

He lived in lucky times. He lived carefully, almost monk like. He loved to garden and swim and those were not expensive hobbies. He loved collecting, dishes from the thirties/forties, certain potteries. He always love to have a little antique space in a collective and did well. So he lived a good life, and had the same cast iron pan and pot when he died that he bought at the Fair Store, his first job in the 50s.

So he was smart, but more, lucky times. Without a lifetime of saving for age, I don't know how anyone can afford to meet the needs of aging. Social Security and a paid off home aren't likely to do it. It's a good and a troubling question you ask, and you aren't the first asking it for certain.
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Reply to AlvaDeer
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Sounds like you are stuck like a rock in a hard place. Could she afford someone to help in her house part time, or is she beyond that? What are her needs? Any family willing to help?These decisions are so tough to make...I am hoping that you have some help in these hard times.
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Reply to Bubba12345
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