I received a call from a facility that I was really interested in for my mom. She is 88 and dementia. We have live-in care. This has been going on for 4 years. My dad passed 18 months ago. I think in the long run this may lighten my load, half distance on driving in, no groceries, house maintance issues, giving breaks, no disappointment on sibling not showing up. But then the guilt sets in. How can I move mom from her home? Money will be an issue in a year, but this may put off nursing home/long term care for 2 years if I can stretch it. I have a month to decide. Sometimes watch what you pray for cuz you may get it. I am just sick over all of this.
From your statement it sounds like your mother needs a Memory Care Assisted Living place. Putting someone with more advanced dementia into AL is no better than leaving them in their own home really (except they can get help with their physical needs.)
Our mother's MC unit has higher functioning dementia patients along with those who need walkers, a few wheelchairs, and a lot who also need physical assistance.
Check around more and see if you can locate a facility that has MC.
You also mentioned agitation - has the doctor tried prescribing anything for this? I prefer not using medication whenever it can be avoided, but even a little something like lorazipam (sp?) just to take the edge off might help. From what I have read, it might require trying different meds/dosages to get the right effect (calm down, but not zoned.) I think they actually Rxed this for our mother when she first arrived, but I manage/order all her meds, and they have never requested a refill, so again, a little just to get over the hump may help!
Betsey
I'm sure no clinician would endorse continuing alcohol intake; but then again I personally as a non-clinician wouldn't endorse taking all alcohol away from someone of 82 who feels happier for it.
Whatever works for her, I guess. Hope you can get someone to give it another think.
And when you do think it through, for most standard families in our age it isn't going to work for all sorts of practical, financial and sometimes deep-rooted emotional reasons. Still! - that's not the same thing as ruling it out unconsidered.
EmandEm what a brilliant, brilliant response to the "I don't want to be in Assisted Living" argument. Yes indeed, very often the person already is! Love it.
Some of us are not so fortunate and have found that our parents thrived in care centers that are well run.
Caregiving for elders is NOT a one size fits all endeavor!
My mom most decidedly did not want to leave her home in an isolated suburb, no sidewalks and no public transport. She lived at the top of a hill. During an icy trip to her home on slippery, hilly and twisty roads, I spun out and my vehicle was nearly hit by an oncoming truck. When I got to mom's house (fortunately, she was not home), the automatic lock was broken and a tree had fallen on her house.
I took this as a sign from somewhere that the fact that we had moved her into an Independent Living facility the month before had been a good idea.
Mom made friends, joined the Stock Market Club and went to everyone's religious services. There was a geriatrician onsite several times a week; he gave her his cell phone number so she could discuss her BP (which went up and down with a mind of its own) whenever she needed. There was a geriatric psychiatrist who called in; SHE got my mother's anxiety under control and insisted that mom have cognitive testing done, which showed that she had developed MCI, the result of an old stroke that we knew nothing about. This finally put an end to my POA brother claiming that everything wrong with mom was "what she's doing to herself"--having a pity party. Nope. Not.
I'm glad that having your mom living with you continues to work. If it stops working, be assured that good care facilities exist. Do some research now.
I see it as making a decision for someone who cannot- as if you are making a choice for a child who cannot understand the situation or ramifications of staying alone.
Certainly worth visiting and having a chat - they were wonderful when my friend and I went there. Alison
So, no guilt. As others have noted, sometimes being with peers and/or caregivers who can work magic can draw a person out and get them more involved with activities, which is good. This does not always happen. You say she sleeps all day, except for those activities you provide. This may not change, it may be the stage she is in, however looking at the same 4 walls with nothing really to do or anyone to really "hang" with, maybe she isn't motivated. At least give it a try, and it should be for a few months - just one month may not be enough for transition.
The other benefits are less stress on you, and more time to visit with mom instead of juggling all that other stuff. No guilt, this is not about guilt, it is what is best for everyone involved!
My mom unwisely clung to her home. 40+ years of deferred maintenance and....
Mom could barely navigate the steps.
Hadn’t used shower/bath for 6 years cuz she was too proud/paranoid/whatever to let someone into her home to adapt the bathroom for elder safety (she certainly had the $).
Used the stove as a filing cabinet and only ate microwave food.
Many, many falls.
Could no longer write legibly, yet had a gazillion bills to pay every month. (Don’t even mention online bill paying. Mom firmly believed that “that internet” was the work of Satan.)
And so much more. All of it heartbreaking and infuriating. Mom had decent assets AND long-term care insurance.
But Mom would not leverage any of these resources when the time was right. The only resource Mom was willing to leverage was ME.
Interspersed with belligerent out bursts of I’M FINE I’M FINE.
She wore me down. She wore me out.
And voila, Mom’s unsafe living environment was her undoing. Her last fall was her LAST fall.
The postal carrier noticed that mail was piling up. Postal carrier called the police to do a welfare check. I’m 35 miles away (where I live) running errands, and my cell phone starts blowing up. A string of unfamiliar & unidentifed numbers. Turned out to be the police, the EMS and the coroner.
Get your mother into care while you have this opening. P*ss her off, risk the hard feelings, whatever it takes.
At this stage of the game, it’s nothing but feel-bad moments for the adult child. Might as well feel bad AND have your Mom be safe.
Big hugs. These years suck.
Keep coming back to AC Forum for support. We understand. We’re here for you.