I'll start...
6:30 - 7:00 getting prepped for the day and having breakfast til 9:30
possibility of morning "activities" in the lounge - newspaper reading, fun & fitness, pet therapy, *passive range of motion exercises, *piano music/sing-a-long once or twice a week (* the ones mom can participate in, the rest she sleeps through)
morning snack (for those who can) and drink
lunch - into the dining room from 11:30 til 1:00
Nap time 1:30 to 3:00/3:30
afternoon snack and drink
back to dining room as early as 4:20
supper 5:00 to 6:00
In bed by 7:00
Oops, I'm starting to rant...
I was feeling a little put out when I posted this because between sleeping and eating (or at least sitting in the dining room waiting) there isn't much of a window for anyone to visit with mom - others don't have ability to pop in as frequently (and briefly) as I do.
Last call, I woke him from a nap. The call before, his phone was off the hook, for longer than a normal conversation he would be having. Starting to worry, giving it some time, knowing that they check on him frequently, and he has a caregiver.
So, calling back later, it turns out that the cat did it-his cat knocked it off the hook.
Anyway, they keep him so busy with proposed activities, he sneaks outside on his scooter when it is not too hot, avoiding the caregiver, who finds him out there on
the grounds.
hoca runs on a similar schedule but spending 4 hours there from 9 am to 1 pm is exhausting especially since mom now needs a hoyer lift to do a diaper change between breakfast and lunch
when she had to spend a month in a SNF with sepsis, residents who needed a hoyer were put to bed after lunch
this was really difficult to adjust to as the bed and room were so small and she had to eat dinner in bed
I assume that mom's small intake of foods and fluids simplifies things for staff, as far as I know she just gets a diaper check before/after her afternoon nap.