Elderly woman looking down indoors

When your parent with dementia dies in a care home — what happens next and what can wait

When a parent with dementia dies in a care home, the care home staff will usually be the first to contact you. If you are not present when the death occurs, take time before you arrive rather than rushing — there is rarely urgency. When you arrive you will have time to sit with your parent before anything else happens. A doctor or nurse will need to certify the death. The care home will guide you through the immediate practicalities, including what needs to happen before the body can be moved. You will need to register the death at the local register office within five days in England and Wales. The care home will typically hold your parent's belongings until you are ready to collect them — there is no pressure to take everything immediately. Allow yourself time before making further decisions.

Frequently Asked Questions Related to end of life

Grieving someone you lost in stages — the particular weight of dementia bereavement

read this FAQ

Support for bereaved dementia carers — the help available for a grief that doesn't fit the usual shape

read this FAQ

Registering the death of someone with dementia — the practical steps, plainly explained

read this FAQ

When your parent with dementia dies in a care home — what happens next and what can wait

read this FAQ

Grieving someone who is still alive — the loss that begins long before dementia ends

read this FAQ

What a good death looks like for someone with dementia — and how to make it possible

read this FAQ

How to talk to a care home about end of life — the conversation to have before it's urgent

read this FAQ

Where someone with dementia should die — why the care home is usually the right answer

read this FAQ
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