Hello, this is a new year, and I want to make the best of my caregiving. I feel very very tired, and am having difficulty in dealing with my alzheimer patient, whom didn't ask for this disease, but as a paid caregiver, there is no such thing as a perfect situation. This is pretty good, with the exception of dealing with her angry outbursts, which I realize have nothing to do with me. She is only 65 and probably internally pretty angry about her alzheimer's. I know within 6 months' her daughter is going to place her in assisted living, so my feeling is that this has worked for 7 months, 6 more month's and then I move on. I am just very very emotionally tired, and I still show her the love she deserves. Any thoughts on how to cope and keep going as her loving care provider, when unless I initiate conversation there is none. Beyond that, she doesn't understand anything I am saying. I guess what I do well, is that I am there for her, I know her better than I did at the beginning, and I smile a lot.
Advice would be great
You have an advantage that most full time family caregivers do not ... you go home at the end of a shift! Be good to yourself. Exercise. Rest. Read or watch something stimulating. Laugh with friends. Recharge yourself.
In the "old days" (not so long ago) fewer people lived to the age when dementia usually first appears. In her late nineties my grandmother became "senile." She was never counted in the dementia statistics but looking back that is what she had. She was in a nursing home at that time.
I think the main factor in a decision to place an elder in a care center is what the caregivers can handle. A family caregiver with health issues, no respite, no in-home help, and constant negativity from non-helping relatives may need to place the loved one sooner than a healthy caregiver with plenty of help. Some impairments and behaviors are easier to care for at home than others.
It sounds to me like your client will never be able to function in Assisted Living. She will need more constant monitoring. If she needs placement in the future, I expect it would be into a memory care facility or a skilled nursing home.
My advice would be to keep on keepin' on. Take care of yourself.
I know it's exhausting but try to go into the Alzheimer's to be with her. Expect nothing. If she's at the point where you are exhausted trying to care for her realize that she doesn't have to have stimulation every hour of those 6 hours you spend with her. Yes, you're her caregiver but the disease prohibits you from relating to her as you might someone else. If you need a short break while you are with her try giving her a deck of cards with no expectations on your part. Just let her do with those cards what she will. Try a coloring book and a big box of crayons. You might want to color and then make sure she has access to crayons and see what she does. My point is that you don't have to entertain her the entire time. It exhausts you and probably exhausts her as well. No need to fill the empty spaces with inane chatter, you can just sit and be with her at times. Hold her hand and just sit. If she's still trying to keep up with her appearance they make fast-drying nailpolish. It dries in like 3 seconds. Polish her nails. And don't feel the need to chat with her the entire time. Long silences make us uncomfortable but I'm not sure someone with Alzheimer's feels the same way. Children's books are full of color, if you don't think it would patronizing to her check out some children's books at the library for her to look at. Many children's books also contain textures, she can run her fingers over some velvet or felt or Velcro.
Whatever you do during your shifts to give yourself a little break without having to leave her alone will not occupy her for long, I'm sure you've experienced that. Which is why you need more than 1 trick up your sleeve. Just let her "be" at times (without leaving her). Alzheimer's is an evil disease that destroys everyone around it. As someone said, you get to go home at the end of your shift so that's a good thing. Do you work for an agency? Can you discuss this with them? I work in home healthcare and my agency has nurses who refuse to work with people with Alzheimer's because it's too challenging. The one case I had where the woman had Alzheimer's I was accused of stealing a picture of Aaron Spelling's home that he husband had printed off the computer. An 8x10 piece of paper with the picture of a mansion on it that I could have printed out myself at home! My agency didn't give this accusation any credibility of course but each time this lady's husband called the agency, wondering where I had placed this picture, I got closer and closer to NEVER working with someone with Alzheimer's again. The agency even called me on my day off! I decided then and there never again. So I feel for you, I really do. 40 hours is a lot of time to spend with someone with Alzheimer's. If it were easy the daughter wouldn't have needed you at all, so everyone knows that it's not easy. "Not easy " doesn't really describe it. But if you're in a position to ask for another assignment and you feel that it's in your best interest to do so don't hesitate. We all have our breaking point and just because you get paid to be with her doesn't mean that it's good for you.
I am blessed that I have what ever it takes to work with alzheimer's patients. But the advice here has been amazing