Mothra,
@Mothra@mander.xyz avatar

This really depends on the country you live in.

southsamurai,
@southsamurai@sh.itjust.works avatar

deleted_by_author

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  • LemmyKnowsBest,

    deleted_by_author

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  • southsamurai,
    @southsamurai@sh.itjust.works avatar

    Well, go fuck yourself then

    lvxferre,
    @lvxferre@lemmy.ml avatar

    Don’t feel discouraged by the Karen above, that should’ve stayed in Reddit alongside their peers. Thoughtful contribution is often verbose, and there’s nothing wrong with it.

    fartington,

    A lot. I have an elderly family member with a live in caretaker and her bank account is being drained.

    Shellbeach,

    In the country I live at the moment, it is common to have a lady living in the house of an elderly person in good health but not enough to do their own cleaning or groceries. It is helpful and reassuring in case the older person falls and it also keep them company.

    Those companions/helpers are often foreign (Ukrainiens at the moment) and are not expensive as you can imagine. However they receive food and lodging in addition to their agreed salary.

    It seems to be beneficial relationships in more than one way as they keep company to each other and the helpers might even improve the local language with the person they care for.

    This is a solution that I’m considering for my mother who has been very independent all her life and would rather throw herself out of the window rather than going to an expensive nursing home where “everybody are just waiting to die” (her words). I’d imagine the slight diminution of privacy is worth it.

    Ulrich_the_Old,

    If you can afford a live in caretaker you are wealthier than those who cannot. Any other problems I can help you with?

    gibmiser,

    Do you feel better now? Did that help?

    PP_BOY_, (edited )
    @PP_BOY_@lemmy.world avatar

    Actual live-in nurses are pretty rare and very expensive, but I think you’re overestimating how common they are.

    Most of what you see is just caretakers who come during the week on a set schedule, which is usually a lot more affordable than nursing homes because you’re paying for someone’s labor versus labor + living accomodations.

    To answer your second question, it would cost whatever rate the nurse agreed to work for. It would have to be pretty competitive. In most cases, having to live at the patient’s house isn’t seen as a benefit of the job.

    ctobrien84,

    You’re referring to a live-in nurse situation, or hospice?

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