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As people get older and less able to live on their own, other living arrangements must be considered. Assisted living is one choice. It helps residents be as independent as possible while giving assistance when needed. The facilities usually include a room or small apartment and meals, along with personal care and support services, social activities, and 24-hour supervision. Some facilities offer health-related services, too. Assisted living homes are very different from one another in size, appearance, and the types of services they offer. Some provide only meals, basic housekeeping, and help with activities of daily living (ADLs) such as bathing, dressing and grooming. Others also arrange transportation and certain health services. Costs vary greatly, and the monthly fee varies depending on the services provided. The facility could be a small home with just a few people or a high-rise apartment-style building with as many as 200 or more residents. Living areas could be a single room or a full apartment with a small kitchen, with prepared meals also served in a common dining area. This arrangement is good for people who can't live on their own but who don't need a nursing home. Older people have many different needs. Those needs often change over time, so senior living offers different levels of care at different costs. Residents who live in an senior living facility that is associated with a nursing home may be able to get additional services if they need them later. If an senior living facility sounds like the right choice, a personal visit is important before you make a final decision. Compare Facilities Each state separately decides how to license and oversee its senior living facilities. Ask your local Area Agency on Aging (AAA) or state health department about your state's rules. Don't consider any facility that isn't appropriately licensed. If one of them isn't, cross it off your list. The state licensing agency and ombudsman's office can tell you if there have been any complaints filed against any of the facilities on your list. After all, having a state license doesn't assure quality care. Call If you are still interested after asking all your questions, ask them to send your more information. Ask for brochures a price list, a map or floor plan, a list of their residents' rights and rules, and copies of all the documents that need to be signed before moving into the facility. Most importantly, ask them to mail you the contract. Some facilities may call their contract a residency, occupancy or admission agreement. Once you receive the materials, read them carefully. Write down questions that come to mind so you won't forget them later. Only now are you ready to visit. The Visit The Contract A few tips: Compare information in the sales brochure with what is in the contract. Pay close attention to the fees, level of care, health care services and discharge policies. Services that a facility promotes in a brochure should also be described in the contract. Make sure you understand what the contract is saying. Have them add any information about care, rights, costs and services that is not there. Remember that facility can promise anything in a brochure, but is only bound legally by what is the signed contract. A good facility would want a possible resident to review the contract in advance. Never sign a contract the day you visit. Before making a decision about a facility, take the contract home and review it with family members. Consider reviewing it with a financial advisor and lawyer. Weighing the Cost Brochures might only discuss fees in a general way, so it is important that a contract spell out in detail all of the costs and expected payment methods. Source: AARP
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