Mother had three one hour visits a day from a home care agency who now say they can't staff these and she has become rude and difficult and carers don't want to go in and have said she needs some respite care. Manager of her retirement development thinks she now needs a nursing home. I am awaiting GP assessment which was begun but discontinued during covid period. I have had to take her, crying and protesting and against her will, to a nursing home while things are sorted out. She is saying I have kidnapped her and am spending her money (on the home) without her consent - the latter of which is true but I have LPA. She insists she is going home (she wouldn't be able to arrange this herself and wouldn't be able to cope without carers). A family member has said this is illegal and I am out of order as she hasn't been assessed for mental capacity yet. What else could I do? I couldn't move in with her as I have carer responsibilities at home. The family member says I should have found another agency, or used two different agencies. When the two weeks of respite are up I can't take her home without carers in place and in my view full-time care is now needed as she wasn't coping well when alone - constant phone calls and confusion but also with good, lucid days which seem to have convinced some family members that she is okay. Show-timing maybe. Anyone else been in this position? I need advice.
I knew he wouldn’t tolerate caregivers coming to his apartment so I got him into assisted living. That didn’t last long since he was diagnosed with a massive brain tumor that morphed into a glioblastoma. Behavior problems, getting an infection, and then Covid resulted in getting bounced around between hospitals and nursing homes. After two months of this I put him into hospice. On the Medicare website I found a fabulous hospice and an excellent nursing home with a five star rating for patient. It is possible to find good places. My hair isn’t falling out and I’m sleeping again.
As for the armchair caregiver family member, forget them. The manager of her retirement has more knowledge and understanding than the family member. Sometimes a GP or PCP isn’t well equipped to asses someone for dementia, especially when the loved one puts on a good show for the doctor. That’s where a neurologist helps a lot more.
Her safety and your sanity are the most important goals to pursue. Remember mom does have dementia and she simply isn’t capable of making decisions. And family hasn’t lived with her. They have no say. They can’t wrap their head around the fact that she’s so incapacitated and so they keep hoping an assessment or working with a different agency will have better news. Good luck!
I was a wreck when we first had to place my mother.
She was scared, confused, and angry.
It is a grief that just keeps giving.
Another poster reminded me that at the point where we were, it was just a choice between two terrible situations. There really wasn’t any “good” choice-definitely not any option that would have made my mother “happy”.
My mother has been living at her Memory Care Assisted Living for almost a year now. I am satisfied that she is well looked after.
I’m sorry that you’re facing all of these difficult challenges.
The SNF your mother is in should be able, quite easily, to administer a MoCA exam (95% oral) to her to see where she's at with the dementia; she'll be scored on a scale from 1-30; 1 being the worst and 30 being no dementia at all. It sounds like your mom IS suffering from dementia, based on her behaviors you describe. Know this: dementia is not constant; the behaviors change from day to day, sometimes from hour to hour. She can be lucid one minute, talking about what happened a decade ago, then not know what DAY it is the next minute, talking about 'where's the baby I need to take care of?' when 'the baby' is now 36 years old. Just b/c your 'family member' sees or hears your mother at a good lucid moment does NOT mean she is not suffering from dementia, not at all! In fact, some folks are so good at Showtiming that they can even fool a DOCTOR into thinking they're fine! Why? Because they've mastered the art of Small Talk! Old muscle memory can remember how to say things like "My don't you look lovely today, what a pretty dress! How is the husband & family doing?" That's surface talk and has no depth to it, which is why they can pull it off. Ask them a real QUESTION and that's when it all falls apart and the show is over. That's the best definition of Showtiming I can give you; my mother is the Queen of it and she's 95 with advanced dementia!!! Mind-boggling.
I live in Denver; covid is not dictating how ANYTHING is done anymore in the medical field. N O T H I N G. A MoCA exam should be no problem to give to your mother; it takes 15 minutes. She does not need an MRI b/c in most cases, vascular dementia or other dementias does NOT show up on an MRI! My mother's hasn't, and she was diagnosed in 2016 via a MoCA exam and a score of 18 out of 30. The doctors said she had 'progressive dementia' and they were right! Her last MoCA score in 2019 was 10! Here we are today, 5 years later, and she's progressed down the dementia highway to an advanced level and can't even use the phone anymore. And when she does, she's trying to lower the volume on the TV set with it.
Keep the SNFs feet to the fire about testing mom and go from there.
Wishing you the best of luck tuning your 'family member OUT' and getting mom the help she needs. It's a rough road you're on and you're doing nothing 'wrong'. Keep that in mind as you proceed.
Im sure a lot people here will agree that finding the right caregiver can be a long process. If your mom can stay at home she’ll be happier but give her a caveat that she will have to have someone with her, someone she chooses, not you. And then start interviewing. We went though 15 before we found two that mom got along with. One I almost fired for a mistake but decided no. And she turned out to be wonderful and stayed til the end. Choosing the right caregiver is a long process and look outside of agencies. Agencies usually take 30% to 70% if caregiver pay so there are a lot of very good independents looking for work and they know how to handle dementia.
Dont try to take on more than you can handle get help from your siblings. The one who griped, get them to come sit with your mom for a few days. Good luck
Making the hard decisions are never easy. You know what the right decisions are, though.
Never heard of Dementia described as a behavioral and emotional thing. Yes, both are involved but its because the brain in dying. The person is confused. And it depends on what part of the brain is evolved when it comes to emotional and behavioral problems are and the type of Dementia they have.
This is the theory, anyway. You can imagine what Covid has done to the practice.
Don't wait for the GP's assessment. You already know the problems and truthfully, there isn't much the GP can do anyway. From what you're telling us, she probably ought to be in assisted living. However, that's costly. So, what can you do?
Let me give you some online resources from the real experts:
Karen Stobbe: Website http://www.in-themoment.net/karen-stobbe.html
Videos: https://youtu.be/RyQz3RvUB0c
Teepa Snow: Website https://teepasnow.com
Videos: https://youtu.be/MA9s2vZflw4
And I invite you to contact me as well (I'm a dementia/Alzheimer's expert)
So far, medical remedies have had very limited to no effects on cognitive disorders. Dementia is a behavioral and emotional issue more than a physical disorder. Even if a person does experience a memory boost from a medication, the most important "remedy" is for his/her carers to understand effective approaches and communication. There are a few of us who specialize in this field. We all have had years on-the-ground/hands-on experience.
Please din't put her in a Nursing Home as you will be signing her death sentence.
She will absolute ly loose her will to live. They are all understaffed and if the patient is deemed trouble, they will tell you they need to give the loved one meds because they are depressed, ect. In reality, the drugs just make them zombie like where as they are easier to handle.
My 70 yr old sister is in one and she doesn't have dementia but had to go after having surgery to get therapy to be able to sit up and walk with a walker.
I walked in yesterday to visit and I could hear her moaning and groaning before I entered the room.
She was laying soaked in pee, pad, sheets, ect.
Her privare area was swollen and raw.
Her old bed linen was piled on the floor next to her bed still and this was 2PM in the afternoon.
They don't answer the call button and she is totally unable to even sit up.
The 1st thing she said was Beverly, get me out of this Hell Hole, I'm going to die here.
She was freezing and only had one thin sheet and thin blanket.
We had left a nice sift warm blanket with her and they said it was being washed and it was.
They didn't give her therapy saying she refused.
The Therapist from the Hospital told me that is what will happen at a Nursing Home.
I told them that was the reason my sister was there and that with a little coaxing or persuasion she would do it, as she is in pain from her surgery.
I told them to call me when they're in the room and I would get her to do it.
Hire a Caregiver for mom, install camera's in her home to keep an eye on her. I installed NEST Cameras at my 96 yr old Dad that stays at his home with 24 7 Caregivers.
They are not all like this and she obviously needs her advocate to get their a$$ in gear and find a rehabilitation facility that will take care of her. I would have been ripping people new orifise' if my loved one was being treated like your sister. WTH is wrong with you to NOT intervene on her behalf?
From your update post below it sounds like a good NH and that's she's adjusting well. She'll probably like being around people her own age, though will never admit it.
No one wants to come for just one hour. Having 3 visits daily is a lot of coming and going, could be confusing for Mom.
It is no part of your responsibilities to move in with your mother and provide for her daily care needs, whether or not you have other inescapable commitments. Sit easy on that point.
Family members such as you describe can be a thorn in one's side. So she thinks you should have found an alternative "package of care," does she? Oh right. And she knows where to get one, does she? No. Thought not.
Is she just tiresome or can she create meaningful trouble?
It does sound as though in a way you have ‘kidnapped her’, but you can’t see alternatives, at least none that are likely to work (eg multiple agencies). That’s why you should pass the responsibility for finding alternatives to your family member. And if they continue to say that it’s ‘illegal’ suggest that they go to the police about it! It is inevitable that the police will ask them what they suggest should be done about it all, so they need to get ready for that..