I cook 3 meals a day. Give his showers. Wash clothes. Pay all his Bill's. Take him to Dr.'s. I do everything for him.
His dementia is getting worse. He gets around with his Walker. He uses the bathroom fine. No pull ups. Eats very good
Sleeps a little more. My sister has a problem with the amount of money I receive. He saw a lawyer and he drew up a contract and specified the amount. She's accusing me that with his dementia I set the amount.
Contract was drawn up almost 2 years ago. What do I do? She says $300.00 a month is plenty and I'm taking his money. She does not help me with any of his care and never offers.
Usually a caregiver earns 170.00 dls a day as live in.
So, been her daughter I would live it as it is.
I took care of my mother and my brother paid me 60 a week.
But I was in Mexico.
Plus all the stress, lack of sleep and other things that comes with the job... Nobody appreciate it.
So, tell your sister shutt her or do the care for him.
We are in an Assisted Living place and the cost per each of us per month is $ 7500.00, memory care is over $ 7500.00
Do see a lawyer and draw up a new contract including payment to SS, so when you will retire you will have some compensation.
Find out the going rate for caregivers in your area. Seems you are wearing yourself OUT. You need to re-assess your situation. See an attorney. None of this makes sense. Based on the information shared, sounds like you are being taken advantage of.
And this does not mean you have to charge that much because maybe your dad can’t possibly afford it. Very few can.
But any amount under this amount that you and your dad agree to pay you is between you and him since it’s his money and YOU are doing the caregiving and house management.
My father is 91 and now in the final stage of dementia. He’s still at home precisely because I’ve been his caregiver/manager for 2 1/2 years. When family pushed back and decided they were too busy to help (leaving me completely alone to handle it all), I went to an attorney with someone else as the POA and told them I would be paid and we would need to hire people 24/7 for days I cannot be there. I have my own home and family to care for yet practically lived at my dad’s for the first 7 months. Had they been willing to help with his care, I would have done it for nothing. Now He pays out nearly $8,000 per month (most to caregivers I hired privately by word of mouth). It would be about twice that if we had chosen a home health agency. My dad has the income fortunately so we rarely have to access his savings. I still get complaints out of the other 5 siblings but I just pull out the fact sheet and that shuts down any argument without me having to be upset.
I’m sure your dad feels very honored and blessed to have a daughter who is willing to do for him what you are doing. Keep up your chin and your way of honoring your dad in ways no facility ever would.
What is your time worth? You cannot replace a family member who takes on the full-time job of that type of situation. Safety and security is what you provide with the everyday caregiver duties...that is priceless. BTW; you don't say where you are from but current wage for just 8 hrs of daily personal care like that is spendy.
If sister continues with her behavior I would suggest she visit the lawyer so that she gets the skinny. Let her know the charge for her visit comes out of the inheritance.
If you haven't, make up a care-plan that addresses the behavior to be observed when in the house visiting dad for a comfortable and stress free millieu. If you are not keeping a chart of daily activities, etc.. start. Nothing fancy; a notebook: date at top where you jot down (handwritten if you want) what went down during the day in a few words at the end of the day. ex: "Dad took meds in am and pm, went to bathroom 4 times today with stool x1, other sister came over blah blah." dames314 is also great advice. Also, sign and date end of each entry in dad's journal.
Make sure you have supplies if/when the physical state calls for. I will tell you writing in a journal of your own would help you too. Self authoring (diary) can keep you sane. 2 journals...1 for what goes on with dad on the daily and 1 for you for your therapy of self-authoring. The daily account of dad would be looked as a legal document to protect yourself.
Stand strong girl: your father is so lucky to have you by his side. Bless you and your father...
It infuriates me when the siblings who are uninvolved with care for their parents gripe about the money!!
My parents are nearly 90 but still live independently with a lot of help from me with meals three times a week, appts, daily meds, and housecleaning. They gift me about the same amount that you receive for doing a whole lot more than I do. If my siblings were to complain (and they won’t) I would ask my parents for more not less!!
You obviously have never provided 24/7/365 care or you would not think that 800.00 monthly is fair.
Just ridiculous to even say that.
Ask you sister if she wants to do it for 300
Good luck❤️
Depending on what level of care is needed for the elder, please know that it is a responsibility involving many steps daily, everyday.
You cannot compare it to childcare. It’s the same concept but different needs.
From what I have seen, there are 3 levels of elder care in facilities. 1. Independent living elder who wants to live in an assisted living facility, probably still drives or can make his/her own decision about transportation, goes on vacations, has a social life etc. They just don’t want to be concerned with the many aspects of living maintenance on a daily or monthly basis. 2. Memory Failure elder who can no longer remember how to do many necessary tasks and have been deemed by their doctor that they cannot live alone anymore. Example: can dress themselves, eat their own food and not be fed, correctly toileting alone without help, bathing at the sink and aware of maintaining their body, ambulatory but maybe need a walker, able to carry on conversations reasonably etc. They cannot grocery shop, drive a car, remember to order their meds, take their meds daily, go to the doctor office alone, make any major decisions, pay bills, do laundry , and more. 3. Bed ridden elders who can no longer walk without help if at all, have to be fed, have to be bathed, have to be reminded to toilet and be taken to toilet, limited awareness of things going on around them, loss of hearing, loss of eyesight, teeth, holding a spoon brushing their own teeth and more.
I know I have missed some important points, but take what I have said into consideration. Make certain they have a trust put together ( maybe $1200.00 ) to be sure they are protected. Maybe a contract is enough, I don’t know. It depends on their assets. The sister/daughter may object to the amount of money the son/brother is getting because sometime we just don’t know all the facts about things in life and under-rate a life task….but know this….when you arrive at the point when you should/must change your lifestyle for you elder family member, don’t be quick to be s cheapskate. All of it….in-home care, temp services, Nursing homes, Senior assisted living facilities, doctors visits, legal fees….is a lot. I choose in-home care. And if you do hire help from the outside, trust is truly important on all levels. If you have a church, try to be at one with a couple of able seniors to help you out. It’s sometimes necessary to have respite care for a couple of weeks. 50 weeks in the year to be making sure another person is alright (so you can come and go as you need) is a long time and capable and trustworthy help is paramount.
The sister/daughter should be taught to think this through. She objects I think because she just doesn’t know anything about this.
I do not endorse the web sites listed below. I included them as examples for reading up on this issue. There is a whole world of information online.
ELDER PAYING FOR SENIOR CARE /
https://www.payingforseniorcare.com/caregivers/dependent_care_tax_credit
Can I Get Paid to Be a Caregiver for a Family Member?
https://www.aarp.org/caregiving/financial-legal/info-2017/you-can-get-paid-as-a-family-caregiver.html
Family Caregivers and Self-Employment Tax
https://www.irs.gov/businesses/small-businesses-self-employed/family-caregivers-and-self-employment-tax