My mother had unexpected surgery and has declined significantly since then, which propelled me into the world of caregiving. Her mobility is hindered and she needs help getting in and out of bed, getting on and off the toilet, moving around, etc. She can walk, but still pretty much needs someone with her 24-7. My sister and I have been trading off, but my mother no longer wants my sister to help. I can't be here 24-7, but I think that is what my mom wants. I am 37 and not ready to give up my life and I feel guilty for that, but is that even a realistic expectation for her to have? I know in-home care will get expensive, but I am not sure what else to do. I don't want to put her in a nursing home, but a friend told me that if she needs someone around the clock, she doesn't need to be at home. I feel stuck because I don't want to feel guilty about not always being here, but I want to care for her the best I can. This is all new to me and I feel extremely overwhelmed. Any advice or suggestions?
Rehab is NOT about being kept company and pampered. Your mother has one chance to regain her functionality.
If you visit, use the time to be a cheerleader and to learn the exercises the PT and OT are doing so you can do them with her at other times. She should be working 3 hours a day at exercise.
,..., read Atul Gwande's On Being Mortal and Roz Chast's Can't We Talk About Something More Pleasant?.
AND think about wants vs. needs.
A dutiful child helps a parent get the appropriate level of care to provide safety. They don't provide hands on care themselves at the expense of their livelihood and relationships.
Apple, YOUR needs count too. Just because wants you there, make a fuss about your arrival or departure time does not become an obligation for you to forfeit your life, livelihood or health.
How is rehab going for her? Is she working hard?
I am currently also studying for a certification and have found little to no time to do that. Time to commit and remember “wants vs. needs.” Thank you so much again.
She just started rehab so we will see. OT/PT in the hospital did see some small improvements and suggested with the consistent therapy from rehab that we should see some continued progress if she works hard. Most likely there will be another update forthcoming.
I know it's been addressed when I was at home, but my mother is now in rehabilitation and I am currently dealing with the issue again of her wanting me there with her all the time. I go everyday and stay for long periods of time. We all know the shortage of workers in these facilities. For the most part she is safe and cared for, but they are just not as attentive to her as she would like.
Long story short - I know I am still enabling her. She has a meltdown when I am leaving too early or when I don't get there early enough or ... when she realizes that my sister is coming to sit with her rather than me. What do I do? How do I break out of this cycle? How do I firm up? Welcoming any and all suggestions.
There are lots of agencies and price ranges for at home assistance. I would check also with your local Council on Aging for types of assistance they can provide such as respite care.
Another source of assistance is through medicade if she is receiving medicade benefits. They have programs for “ In Home Supportive Services”. You have to make separate application. They will come to home and determine number of hours she is eligible to receive support at home. Someone will have to approve time card for person who comes to home.
They provide light house keeping, personal care, meal prep, etc.
I don’t believe you mentioned who would be paying for the help. If your mom does not want your sister and she has money to pay for help then it’s up to her to pay for some help, you can’t do everything . If you are doing all the work and have to pay for help it’s up to you who helps and how and when.
I was put in the very same position in 2018 at 26, only I had zero relief. Only in my case, my mom was in the middle of cancer treatments and fell and hurt her ankle.
Also, try to convince her to exercise regularly and not sit around and do nothing all day long. Try to put your foot down and make her get extra help or do PT if need be.
Don't let her medical issues ruin two lives. The best way to make both of you happy is for both of you to accept the inevitable: placement. If she refuses, contact Adult Protective Services to get her a social worker who can evaluate her situation.
Think of this as a temporary halt on the insanity so that you can get yourself better acquainted with the rules and develop a future plan for your mother and yourselves. If your mother is not in too much pain and she is cognizant of what is happening, she can also participate in the planning, which will take her mind off the pain that she is going through. The plans you come up with now, will probably help you through the future, even if you don't need them within the next year or so.
Good luck!
The hospital did an MRI and they believe they found the issue! To summarize - she has a spinal issue that was pinching nerves causing her pain and delays. An answer! And the better part is there an operation that can fix it, but they are suggesting she get evaluated and do a few weeks of therapy to get stronger in order to be in the best possible condition before she does get surgery. From what the doctor says, this operation could significantly improve her ability to move and give her a much better quality of life. There are of course a few things to navigate between here and the potential surgery so I may be back to seek more advice, but it is good to know what is going on and that there may be a solution!
Thank you all again so much. I appreciate the outpouring of advice and support more than you may ever know.
Our mom had a double knee replacement just 15 years ago, and she did very little rehab, as little bike riding or moving, as possible. When asked how it was to have new knees, she said it just makes it easier to realize how much she hurts everywhere else. Glass half full, was kinda mom’s vibe. She is now almost immobile, and I’m not sure she can get off the couch, or out of her recliner, without help. The few times she has been at our home, due to covid, she does not get up without the waist belt, and our caregiving sister pulling her up. I help, to let mom know I can be useful too, but she is extremely reliant, and more comfortable, with her youngest daughter. Do your best to utilize ALL the help offered, do not think you can be her everything. Good luck to your family, and please know, if you enable your mom, like our two youngest sisters enabled our mom, she will not be best served. With tough love and kindness, assure her it is important that she try hard, for her own self. You cannot be her hand maiden. You are far too young.
Sending encouragement to you on this journey💕
By the way i think your mom either doesn't want to burden your sister any longer or she just misses you and or your nicer. I don't know but if your sister is ok with helping your mom. i don't understand why she doesn't stay put. you could go and help out when you can financially, visits etc.
Does mom have loads of money stashed for old age? If so, start using it.
If not, you figure out who covers what hours of mom's care, if there is even minimal income from mom to cover hired help for the gaps. Tell mom you quitting your job and staying home at the age of 37 is NOT an option. You have your own future/old age to plan for and need earnings for that.
Talk to her doctor about rehab care to see if mom can build herself back up. Perhaps she got out of hospital and sent home when she should have been sent to rehab.
If insurance does not cover the cost you can also look into a program like IRIS. They not only will cover things that are not covered by insurance, but will pay for healthcare providers including family. Your mother can remain in charge of who she wants. It is not like dumping her in home where they take away everything you have and you often neglect and abuse people.
The best program we have here is IRIS, but every state should have something similar. Especially if your mother could not afford to pay for the help or things she may now need in her home to help with her. This is a great option. You could also be paid as one of her health care givers giving you income to help yourself and your mother if you like.
I have a mother who is not particularly self motivated as a rule so speaking from some experience here. I would venture to guess that your mother’s desire to have you around all the time and not your sister is that you are quicker to just do everything for her where as your sister expects her to do the things for herself that she can or at least try. It’s over simplifying but you feel guilty letting mom struggle and your sister feels guilty not helping her get back to where she was by making her struggle. You both want the same thing but come at it from two extremes. I remember the speech therapist telling us not to help my mom so quickly when she was trying to say something (aphasia post stroke) but don’t let her get too frustrated either. It was so hard at first for me to let her struggle when I knew what she was trying to say, my brother was much better at just letting her struggle and we both had to find that balance of knowing when it was time to help before she got too frustrated and shut down. The lack of immediate response or help in rehab may have been in part to them encouraging her to try and do it for herself as well as being under staffed and her growing dependence on you may be more about other caregivers, including your sister, trying to get her to do things for herself which seems “mean” to her compared to you who runs around making her life easy while making your own hard because she isn’t motivated to do it for herself. She may never be too, able and wanting to are very different but can become very blurred.
Whatever the medical or emotional reasoning I think you need to ask your mother what she wants. Not in an exasperated moment or a negative way at all but very sincerely what does your mother hope for, how does she see the next 6 months? Is she hoping you come to live with her and be her sole caregiver, does she expect things to go back to the way they were before her surgery, does she want them too? Does she want to stay in the home she is in or does she want to move somewhere else (not necessarily a NH)? Then you can both give some thought to what she really wants and how that could happen and pick up the conversation another time. Then have a conversation with your sister about what’s happening and what you are each actually able to do moving forward. The need is going to get greater as time goes on, now is the time to visit what that might look like. Maybe then the 3 of you can revisit the conversation together and start to express the roadblocks as well as options for attaining the various options. This is going to be on going and fluid process it won’t all be solved in one conversation.
GLuck
"Medicare program that provides frail individuals age 55 and older comprehensive medical and social services coordinated and provided by an interdisciplinary team of professionals in a community-based center and in their homes, helping program participants delay or avoid long-term nursing home care. Each PACE participant receives customized care that is planned and delivered by a coordinated, interdisciplinary team of professionals working at the center. The team meets regularly with each participant and his or her representative in order to assess the participant's needs. A participant's care plan usually integrates some home care services from the team with several visits each week to the PACE center, which serves as the hub for medical care, rehabilitation, social activities and dining."
I got quite a few patients into this program in central New Jersey and they (and their long suffering caring families) fell in love with it.
Wishing your and your sister (get her back on your train because this takes teamwork) good luck. And turn off your phone at night!!
Do not take over her care out of guilt.
best assisted living with lots hands on care …she/family can afford. It’s very dangerous for her to be alone even for couple hours day or night.
Tell your mom you can’t take good care of her 24/7 and she’s not safe .
iMHO a good facility much better than being isolated with caregiver at home… she’ll have lots people around all day.. activities.. company.. and the help she needs .
But you’ll have to come terms with guilt … it means you’re a caring person. We all have !!! Know that you’re keeping your mother safe and you’re doing best you can… visit a lot
stay for some activities.. bring little presents .. and take her outings often.
best luck
Your mother's primary care doc can write the orders for VNA--physical therapy, occupational therapy, an RN will do an assessment and also home blood draws if needed.
The railing around the seat worked for my Mom as opposed to the booster seat. The booster seat you can't wipe yourself as good, you do not want Mom to get UTI's. Ask Mom's PCP about a shot of cranberry juice in the morning.
Health insurance may cover 80% of a hospital bed with railings (1/2 so they won't feel closed in) that goes up and down. A CNA can shower your Mom in a shower chair (again from your durable medical equipment store--along with a shower hose).
You do not have to do this alone. I'm surprised upon hospital discharge they did not have a "Care Plan" in place with follow up of home services. You must be proactive and ask for exactly what you need that is covered under your mother's health insurance.
I recommend going on the portal. If I write to my mother's PCP after work hours, the next morning when I wake up I have an answer on the portal. Basically you can email the practice but with a code for privacy because of the HIPPA laws.
Ask about an Up Walker Lite. Sounds like your mom is fragile right now so go by what the doc says. After a while you will learn the routine. Keep the landline, also have an extension in the bedroom.
Make sure you can the paperwork to discuss her medical, dental, etc. A lifeline button and/or a camera/sensor on the door can send you a text if mom goes out the door. Your internet provider can supply this. You don't have to spend a lot of $$$ on this.
Clean clothing with baking soda and vinegar. No area rugs, throw out all walk-in shoes. Good lighting, a routine and tell the doc bring on the troops, services.
There is help available. I will pray for you.
It is too bad that she didn't stay in rehab longer. When my mom needed rehab after her knee replacement, I set some rules as to what she needed to do to come home. Walk from her room to the bathroom. Get up the 3 stairs into our house. Basically that she needed to be independent mobility wise cuz I'm not getting up all night to help her! It worked well.
Now she was losing mobility again so her doc ordered PT. We are having home PT come and they come twice a week. Then I have hired aides to come in on the other days and do the PT exercises with her, as well as help her with other things. This is working out really well because she doe not listen to me about doing her exercises and it is terribly frustrating for me. I suggest you do the same thing. Ask around to find some local aids that do homecare. I found 3 wonderful women this way. They are so much help. If she doesn't like your sister or the aides there with her, let her know that the only way those visitors can be reduced is by her working hard and getting stronger and more independent.
Since your mom is in such rough shape, I'd say she kind of doesn't get much say in how things are going to happen. She can want what she wants, but that doesn't mean you need to give it to her. I tell my mom the caregivers are for ME, my peace of mind, so I can leave the house without worry.
The eval on 5/12 should be helpful. It is possible that you won't get a definitive answer at this appointment. Maybe they'll need to do tests, etc. So I would still proceed with getting help ASAP.
If she insists on calling you in the middle of the night, get her a life alert necklace to press in the event of a fall or true emergency, and turn your phone off.
Do NOT give up your life for her. You can help coordinate her care. You can personally help her, as you see fit. But your life has to come first. Do some reading on how to set boundaries and start enforcing them with her now. She won't be happy but you're not happy with the situation as it is so it needs to change.
Good luck.
Let us know how neuro goes.