Memory Care vs. Skilled Nursing for Alzheimer’s
When does an Alzheimer’s patient need memory care vs. a skilled nursing facility? A Texas placement specialist explains the decision.
Alzheimer’s disease doesn’t follow a predictable path, and the right care setting depends on where someone is in their progression — not just their diagnosis. Early to mid-stage Alzheimer’s is typically served well by memory care; late-stage Alzheimer’s with medical complexity often requires skilled nursing. Here’s how to think through the decision.
Stage-based decision framework
For early to mid-stage Alzheimer’s — when the primary challenges are wandering, safety, confusion, and behavioral symptoms — memory care is almost always the better setting. The dementia-specialized staff, secured environment, and structured programming are purpose-built for this stage. Late-stage Alzheimer’s with swallowing difficulties, recurrent infections, significant weight loss, or pressure wounds typically requires a skilled nursing facility where on-site nursing can manage medical complexity. Some memory care units can handle late-stage if they have strong nursing oversight; assess the specific facility carefully.
Questions Families Ask About This Decision
Sometimes yes. Many memory care communities can manage late-stage residents if they don’t have acute medical needs like wound care or IV therapy. The key is whether the facility has sufficient nursing staff to manage complexity. Ask specifically about their highest-acuity current residents.
No. Medicare does not cover assisted living or memory care. Memory care is almost always private-pay or, for eligible individuals, STAR+PLUS Medicaid waiver. Medicare covers skilled nursing only after a qualifying 3-day hospital stay.
Key triggers include: recurrent falls with injury, significant weight loss or swallowing problems (dysphagia), stage 3–4 pressure wounds, recurrent UTIs or pneumonia requiring IV treatment, or behavioral symptoms that memory care staff cannot safely manage.
Generally less expensive — memory care in Texas averages $4,500–$7,500/month vs. $6,000–$9,500 for skilled nursing. Skilled nursing’s higher cost reflects the on-site nursing and therapy staffing model.
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