Is It Worth the Cost to Hire a Geriatric Care Manager?

My mom, Judy, and my son, Andrew, when he was one, visiting Grammy's "big lake water" at her isolated cottage. Mom's symptoms of dementia were just beginning, and it took me several years to figure out what was going on. Looking back, I wish I had hired a geriatric care manager to assess her living situation.Occasionally on this blog I write about things I wish I had done differently as a care partner for my mother, Judy, who lived with vascular dementia and probable Alzheimer’s disease. Today I’d like to talk about geriatric care managers—what they are, and why I wish I had hired one.
Even though I felt acutely stressed as a “sandwich generation” caregiver (caring for my children as well as my mother), I rejected the idea of hiring a geriatric care manager (a GCM). I was trying to stretch my mother’s modest savings, and thought that hiring a GCM would be too extravagant.
Looking back, I wish I had hired a GCM, even before Mom moved into my home. A GCM would likely have had a real impact on the choices I made and the quality of my mother’s life, my life, and that of my husband and children.
In my post this week for caregivers.com, I outline some of the ways we could have benefited from hiring a GCM, and discuss the main reason people decide not to hire a GCM.
Read more: Five Reasons to Hire a Geriatric Care Manager, and One Perhaps Not To













