At one time I was going over and staying at her house while she bathed but now when I suggest it she tells me she's already had one. She has NO short term memory so even if she had she wouldn't remember. My daughter and I are discussing hiring a home health person to come in once a week to make her take a bath, change sheets, and clean out her refrigerator because she gets angry if we suggest doing it. Any ideas on how we should go about this and what to do about brushing her teeth every day?
Now, will your Mom allow "strangers" into the house? That seems to be a common battle. My Mom would refused. Dad, on the other hand, would be holding the door open for the caregivers to come in to help him. Hope your Mom is the latter.
As for your Mom bushing her teeth, that's tough. Sometimes we need to pick our battles, and teeth bushing is usually down the list. Can Mom eat apples? That's nature's tooth brush.
I fear for you and your mom that significant changes are coming, sooner rather than later. As much as possible, plan now to get ahead of them. Because when the time comes, you may be in a state of panic to be able to be helpful. Good luck to you.
Sounds like dementia:(
Just my 2 cents!
She would not let me help her with bath, personal care.
I have hired an agency to send an aide in four hours a day weekdays. The side cleans her up in the morning, gives her a shower, gets her dressed, walks her, talks to her, etc.
I can handle the house. I can't be hit and punched while caring for her. So while my siblings balk at the cost, this is a Godsend.
And I get a few hours out of the house, which helps me.
Um. What do you mean by "fine," then? And how long is it since you noticed this falling off in her ability to care for herself?
We had it for my Dad and later for my DH and I was always thankful to have an extra pair of eyes on them.
My stepfather forgot how to brush his teeth about midway thru Alzheimer’s. My mother has vascular dementia and refused to shower at home pretty early on. I think she was afraid of falling but now at the ALF (with more advanced dementia) claims she can do it and has never needed help( not true lol)
I didn’t notice your location but 24/7 in home health care in my area is double cost of a very nice ALF .
Truthfully, there comes a time when their judgement is so faulty you can’t allow them to make the decision. Imo safety is much more important than pride.
As ShenaD pointed out, if you don't live there, you really have no idea what she does or doesn't do! I discovered after we took mom's car away and had to provide food or trips to grocery that she wasn't cooking anymore. She was eating mainly frozen dinners and packaged foods like graham crackers and fruit cups! Even her beloved muffins, which she would cut in half and freeze for later were not being eaten, as she'd forget she had them. Worse, she resorted to cutting up grocery bags to wrap them up although she had more than enough plastic wrap, tin foil and freezer baggies!!! If I didn't leave enough trash bags in the bottom of the trash can, she'd use grocery bags there too (much too small!) She would ask for more paper towels, TP, plastic wrap, etc and stash them away and forget she had any!!
Our mom lived alone and wasn't close enough to visit daily (more like every other week.) She also had short-term memory issues, mainly repetitive questions or statements (the first inkling I had, but in retrospect there were some other minor subtle "clues".) However, once you really get involved you realize it is worse than suspected (see above!)
We also tried the home aides, with plans to let her stay in her own place as long as possible. It can't hurt to try, but be aware that all too often they will reject this "help." We started with 3 days/week, 1 hour (the minimum offered) and all they had to do was check she took her meds and ensure she was okay. One was definitely more "industrious" and would sweep the kitchen and/or clean up the bathroom. Mom would get embarrassed or something and either try to get her to stop or would contribute. I didn't really care what they did for the hour, so long as the meds were checked (used a timed locked dispenser) and she was okay. We upped this to 5 days/week, but in about 2 months or less she refused to let them in! That ended that plan.
Time for plan B. It took us time to find a place we liked, and the one we chose was still in the rebuild phase, so we had to limp along and wait. Moving her was another challenge!
Is it possible for one of you to stay there for a week, maybe alternate you and your daughter so it covers 2 weeks? Then you will have a much better idea what her real needs are. Use an excuse, maybe like you're having work done and need a place to stay for a week. Don't offer to help or do things she doesn't seem to be able to right away, just monitor (of course you can work together on making meals, cleaning or whatever, just don't take over - you need to see what she can and can't do.)
Once you have a better idea of what all her needs are, you can look into hiring someone, but be prepared for refusal. If you are lucky, she will be okay with help. As others noted, neither you nor the aides can force her to do anything, but if the aides are any good, they can coax some people to accept some help. If she is like some and refuses help/aides, you will have to start planning for another solution (AL or MC.) Mom's self-image/perception was certainly out of whack - she and your mom might THINK they had bathed, brushed, cooked or what have you, but in reality it was weeks ago! Mom considered herself fine, independent, etc. and would tell you or anyone else she was, but she wasn't. Even now I had to resort to cutting the size tag out of new clothes, because she wouldn't consider like/dislike, she would look at the size tag (Oh, that is too big, I usually wear a medium!)
Towards the latter part of her living alone, we had some cameras installed, to monitor the door and downstairs area - observing to be sure no one gets in, she didn't wander and could see now and then she was okay - while watching the video clips, I noted she started wearing the same clothes over and over, even up to 6 days one week! This was NOT her norm...