My mom has had Alzheimer's for about 8 years. She's 81 and has been in a nursing home- a memory care facility- for a year and a half. Recently, Alz drugs were discontinued and then she developed a bad cold which lead to pneumonia. Beginning about 2 weeks ago, she began refusing care most of the time. She also pushes her food away, isn't drinking much, and she's refusing her meds, some of which she gets to reduce agitation. This is not all the time, but at least part or most of every day. Could she be trying to check out, or would she be able to make that decision? My MIL who had Parkinson's did make the decision to die, but she had her wits about her. Mom can't communicate much anymore. She gets some words out, and seems to understand words. She's even still able to read some words (former English teacher!). She rallied for a visit with my adult sons 4 days ago. But yesterday was awful. She wouldn't even open her eyes when I was there, which is very strange. They can't get her to cooperate for a urine test. I don't know if she's trying to tell us something through her actions. Do any of you have experience with this with an Alzheimer's loved one?
It can be very heart-wrenching to be in that Med.Directive/Advocate position of making end-of-life choices for someone who no longer can.
It can Feel like it goes against everything we ever learned...and certainly, against inner survival instincts, to have to be the one to stop life support activities [food, water, meds, etc. treatments].
Often, people "rally" before they go. It sounds like maybe yours did that.
The pattern usually always is followed by relapsing into their illnesses and/or dementias...science has nothing to prevent or improve that.
It has been my experience, during patient care of elders and in hospice, that even those with severe dementias, including Alzheimer's, can often show some evidence that they do have some thoughts left, which they might wish to act on...and will try to do so. Stopping eating and drinking, is often that.
Whether that is intentional, or related to them "forgetting" to sustain themselves, is a moot point...they are too sick and science has Nothing to help it with.
They might, or not, be able to express them clearly to others.
To those not paying attention, the evidence that they have any cogent thoughts, can also resemble behaviors of a dementia'd mind...unless one knows that person, or has watched their behaviors closely for some time.
Things people might be ask themselves, might include:
---- Would your elder want to exist long-term, in a facility with no way to communicate and _no quality of life_?
Many, with minds intact, express strong feelings about NEVER wanting to end up in vegetative circumstances, much less prolonged using advanced life-saving techniques.
Most just say they wish to "be kept comfortable"...which can differ, per person, but bottom line, they don't wish to have their lives artificially extended, at the very least, not beyond reason.
---Inside yourself, is it OK to allow loved ones to naturally dwindle and die due to their illnesses/conditions, faced with only worsening of that?
You are her Advocate...make sure the facility honors her wishes in the most humane ways possible.
Search yourself; see what your beliefs are, and how those might help support allowing someone in her circumstances to die more naturally, with as much Grace as possible.
----If there is an Advanced Directive on file there, to prevent anyone from using advanced lifesaving, artificially prolong life, are there some staff who might be struggling against that? Some do. Even some dealing with writing orders for hospice patients.
We cannot prevent death; nobody gets out of life, alive. We miss those who go before us, terribly. We want to keep each piece of our hearts with us.
But we cannot, no matter what, prevent anyone dying.
We only have a certain amount of control over some of it, for a certain amount of time.
Sooner or later, we must allow them to die, with as much _Grace_ as we can muster, holding tightly to the good memories.
Imho, they are still there in our hearts...we can still talk with them...only their bodies are gone.
Keep talking with her. It is said that the last sense to go, is hearing [unless it was already gone].
In those precious, brief moments during the dying process [minutes, hours, days or weeks..sometimes months], one might experience that sense of Grace, sort of like attending a birthing for them into another level of existence.
Kinda like witnessing and feelings at a birth into this life. Just at opposite ends of the lifespan.
As Shakespeare put it, “Death, a necessary end, will come when it will come.”
You can try for a W/E if he is mobile enough and you can get him to go back, or before that try taking him out for meals or a drive.
Iwentanon You will know when the time comes. Your 86 year old will accept less and less. If she can't refuse will clamp her lips shut. As she slips she will simply let food sit in the mouth, let it fall out or actively spit it out. Continue to offer tiny amounts of easily swallowed food but do not force give small amounts of liquid with a straw, or sippy cup if she is able. Water is no always palatable but some other drink you know she likes. Ginger Ale is good. If it soothes your conscience try a little Boost. Personally I hate Ensure but the chocolate Boost is just like chocolate milk but contains no dairy and is very easy to digest. If she is unable to swallow you can use a 1 ml syringe without a needle or kids medicine dropper to drip liquids into her mouth to keep it moist. Never squirt it into the back of the throat as she is likely to choke and get aspiration pneumonia.
Medication are also of little use and can often be stopped with the exception of those for pain or anxiety.
Your job as a caregiver is to take care of the whole person. Eating is only a small part unless your job is simply to go in and feed her
these sites are very informative and people do tell their stories,
so we are not alone.
Our 86 year old has dementia and yes, I do worry about keeping her alive,
against her will, but in her case, like some forget the days of the week, she does that too, but her issue and has always been forgetting to eat.
My job as her caregiver is to make sure she eats.
When would I know that it is different and this time has come?
God Bless You!
It's heart-wrenching; we've been taught our whole lives, to do everything to get them well again.
One Gma had Alzheimer's, & died of the almost inevitable pneumonia.
One Gma, slowly more demented, worse by her shrinking scope of contact with the world-- fell, broke her back again, in terrible pain, felt afraid to die [she never had been afraid before]--but, also, she said, was afraid of missing anything [it was her great grandchild's 8th grade graduation that very evening]. It took heavy pain meds to relieve her stress enough so she could think a bit better, & all of us giving her permission to let go & let God.
Yes, I DO believe, based on studies & observation, that even in a demented &/or damaged mind, incapacitated to some extreme levels due to illness, injury, etc., that
a person has some capability, at some level, to decide some things for themselves--including when it's time to let go & meet Death.
Even tho unable to verbally communicate, people do things that show a congruent idea IS intact in their mind---they just can't discuss it---may lack words or, can't can't process complex thought, or, can't talk back-&-forth too much about anything, etc., but still are able to think a bit of a thought, & try to act on it….They have a right to.
Love is the continuum everything & everyone, exists in.
Even knowing this, STILL doesn't make it easier to say goodbye.
Death is a natural part of life. Hard to go through. We HAVE to let them go sometime.
Even though we can't see, touch or hug them anymore, Love, I believe, goes on forever, across all time & space;
...like air we breath but can't see, those who've died, go on:
Caregiving is some of the most rewarding, most frustrating, most painful work anyone can do.
We do it because we love & care.
It's never enough, yet it's too much; it's so much more than we expect; it's overwhelming; sometimes we don't know how we will survive it.
An elderly person with dementia or chronic ills, leads a compromised life--what -quality- can that be?
Some linger long; some happily existing sitting by a window; others disturbed, roaming, seek something never found, or battle internal arguments.
ALL those I've cared for, were able to communicate some way, maybe bits & pieces--but they had ways to communicate what idea they were stuck on.
Who really listens?
Who pays attention to subtle or non-verbal clues, in so-busy lives & schedules?
If it's a form of subtle communication we are incapable of understanding, only someone familiar with the person can pick up on--most folks are gonna miss those clues.
A very sick person who recognizes they no longer can deal with being repeatedly sick---pneumonia is that, & it generally means the death of Alzheimer's patients--
---the person may internally understand "this has to stop", or "it's not stopping fast enough", or "they keep giving me meds to keep me alive", or "I want this to stop".
They may only have some control over whether they allow a spoon to enter their mouths---but if they have that, they can act on it.
With some levels of illnesses, too, there is an internal feeling that -feels- like on-coming death…I don't know how else to describe it--some may act on that feeling, take to their beds & wait for it.
Refusing to eat, is one of the clues.
"Rallying" some days or hours before dying, is also an indicator, particularly if the person then again starts failing after the rally--that death is closer.
Be comforted in your Love, your caring--the person going through this DOES understand Love to--no matter how scrambled their mental processes.
Even the most mentally ill or brain-damaged person, understands--even if it's only a tiny bit, when someone does caring things for them--even if they can't express themselves to say that--they do understand when someone cares.
It matters.
YOU matter.
You matter to your loved ones, even if they can't say so, even if some of them can't control their behaviors or words, even if they act-out badly at their caregivers
--that's not the real "them"; the real person inside is masked by those imbalances--they are still in there, appreciating what you do for them.
Deardau continues to ask very pointed/focused questions about what can be a very confusing, and heart wrenching time in a loved one's life, and especially for those who love them. If I'm understanding Deardau correctly...she isn't asking for people's opinions on general end-of-life issues. She's asking if people who have been determined to have declining mental ability, due to dementia/alzheimer's, have the mental capability of making clear, logical, without doubt, decisions concerning their medical care. I think it depends on when they make decisions...how deep into dementia/alzheimers are they? If early after their diagnosis and/or they are determined to have mild or early dementia, I think they may have the capacity to make decisions about their future..."on a good day".
But, when they are at a weakened, declining state..for instance when some might say "they're wanting to go"...the answer is NO. This is part of the reason why the medical community has created and encourages people to have advance directives and living wills created, while healthy and mental capacity is good. Because when we age or due to an accident or disease, we may lose capacity to make clear, absolute decisions. Especially with dementia/alzheimer's patients (meaning dead & dying brain cells) they were diagnosed with the illness due to reports of ongoing lack of memory, poor logic, foggy thinking etc. If they have not expressed their wishes pre-diagnosis or while their mental capacity was good, then I could not be assured that what they say they want now, at this weakened state and further mental decline, is absolutely what they are wanting.
It doesn't make sense to me...that with dementia/alzheimer patients we question their mental capacity and decisions they made in the past (which led to diagnosis & knowledge)...but suddenly we trust everything coming from their brain? We don't question or doubt their decisions at a weakened, further-declined state...like if and what treatment they want, or let them go? I think it's very easy to let our personal opinions, religious views and other factors get in the way of logical, common sense thinking. Who is really being served here by what we may hastily, for whatever reasons, decide for another?
My mother has dementia and I am her 24/7 caregiver and have been for about 8 years. If it was my mother in the hospital, I would keep her comfortable, but let her go. If she has a trust and DNR, read it several times and rest assured you are making sure HER WISHES are being carried out.
God Bless You!
I strongly urge you to have hospice care for her at this time. They can provide service right where she is.
You are absolutely correct Deardau in realizing that is indeed the question and issue here. My father, siblings and I faced this two years ago when my late mother with dementia began showing similar characteristics as your mother. There was no advance directive or living will. So, the family was in the position to make decisions. We didn't agree. My father and brother took the neutral position. My sister and I had opposite opinions on whether we should let mom go or intervene.
To this day, and I would suspect for the rest of my life, I do/will harbor animosity towards my sister (and a little towards for my father) for how this was handled. IMO, she let her personal beliefs, misguided opinion, and unsupported theories lead her/them to make some poor decisions. They misfocused. My sister "took charge" and made sure her opinion was carried out. For a variety of reasons, she seemed to take a "one-size-fits-all approach" (which she thought was right and the only way), rather than evaluate the situation and based on specific circumstances with my mother, discuss and make decisions. Over the years, I have read numerous comments on this site, which sound similar.
Since your mom has an advance directive in place, my suggestion would be to let that be your guide. I would assume she completed it when she was lucid and aware? However, in general, if there are questions about someone's intent or wishes and there is no living will/advance directive or it is not clear what they want, I would suggest looking at these two things. 1) Have they ever expressed in the past their opinion about such matters? Perhaps how a family member or friend was or was not treated? 2) What is their general health? If you got them past this "episode" could they live a happy, normal and pretty healthy life?
For what it's worth. I wish you the best Deardau...and peace.
I would like to mention two additional things. You state that you are the agent under a medical advance directive, and you might be reluctant to act because you do not know if your mom has the capacity to understand the choice due to her dementia. That is your job as the agent, to make the choices, when she cannot. Do not feel bad about it, she asked you to do that. Your standard is to do what your mom would do if she were able to make the choice herself. If your mom was okay, would she want to continue to live, or would she want to die? None of us readers know that choice better than you do. Please to not feel guilty about your choice, your mom is blessed to have someone available to make that choice for her.
Please also look into hospice and palliative care, both of which are covered under Medicare. You can receive hospice care and recover and that is okay. Recovery does not frequently, but it does happen now and then, and that is not a problem. But hospice will also provide some benefits for you, too.
Joy