The best places to look are the retirement communities with assisted living. They will take good care of your family member and make sure that they are safe at all times.
It would be extremely mean but yes. and it would take a long process.
Depending on the relationship with the person retiring, would determine what to say in a written Happy Retirement. If the relationship is not a close on, a simple "Congratulations and Happy Retirement" would be sufficient.
You can wish a long and happy retirement for an Italian person. The same wishes would apply to an Italian person as you would wish for anyone else. Wish them joy, fun, and time to spend with their family.
Alzheimers is a type of dementia so you can not really compare the two.However alzheimers is a very agressive disease so therefore i would consider it to be the worst of the two.
You can check out the Alzheimers Association for information or talk with your Grandmothers doctor. Alzheimers Association would have a check list of questions that you can use to talk with her doctor.
If there is no feeding tube I would give that person a week...and that is being generous.
Common questions regarding early retirement forum involve eligibility, the time frame in which a person has to decide whether or not they will take early retirement, and the extent to which early retirement benefits may or may not change after retirement.
Yes, you can add locks or security devices to doors and windows to keep Alzheimers patients from 'roaming'which is a tendency many of the see to have. You would probably wish to give the patient SOME outdoor exposure as a humanitarian aspect of their care.
A secondary beneficiary is a person who would receive the benefits of a life insurance policy or retirement plan in the event that the insured person dies and the primary beneficiary has also passed away. Then, the secondary beneficiary would receive the benefits.
Grandfather looked forward to retirement. Retirement housing costs a lot of money.
You are in a difficult position. Your mother's doctor would be the best person to make that determination right now but he cannot discuss her health matters with you without her permission. Your mother may have the legal capacity to make a will. There are varying degrees of Alzheimers. If you have honest doubts that your mother was aware of what she was doing when she signed a new will you should consult with an attorney. Whatever you decide you should act ASAP since Alzheimers advances quickly in some patients.
No. The owner of the retirement fund would need to have the legal capacity to make that change. You can't change their will either. It is disturbing to think that after a person has decided who should receive their property after their death, someone would come along and think they could change it after they have become legally incapacitated.