I am in a real pickle. My mom has been told by her doctor, and most recently by an emergency room doctor, that she needs to be living in a facility that provides some level of care or in a living situation that does not involve having to climb 2 flights of stairs. Since her hospitalization in June, Visiting Nurses has provided care in her home, and she has been considered homebound. In any case, my mom will NOT agree to do anything (set up care with someone else for when they leave) or make arrangements to have various things done (groceries, laundry, taking out trash, etc. Her nurse, her social worker, me ... we're all broken records and she won't listen. She hung up on me Monday because I was telling her something she didn't want to hear re: hiring help to get to one of her doctor's appointments or risk a fall (which could negatively impact her independence and land her in a nursing home--which she doesn't want).
The nurse told me today that they have never run into a situation like this where someone just absolutely refuses help or is this stubborn. My mom is of sound mind, but is making decisions (as I've pointed out to her) that don't support the independence she still wants. She keeps saying she won't go into a nursing home. I am an only child, not married, and there is no other family on her side to help. I'm it. And it is not an option for her to move in with me or near me. Her needs exceed my ability to meet them, and I know what my limits are. I am willing to help, provide information, facilitate care, etc. but I am unable and unwilling to take on full-time caregiving in this situation.
So my question is twofold:
1) How would you handle this situation? And if you have had to deal with it, did you have to do to get your stubborn parent to take the right action?
2) At what point would a situation be considered neglect (by an adult child) under the law if they are aware of the unsafe situation, but the senior refuses to do anything on their own behalf or spend their money to make needed changes.
I'm at my wit's end and at the end of my rope. I don't know what to do!!!!
I've been thinking a lot lately about the rights of elders vs. worried adult children.
The dignity of the elder should be considered no matter where he or she lives, and cognitively sound elders should be able to make decisions.
While we have wonderful facility care in my community and many people choose the safety and social environment of a quality assisted living facility or even nursing home, that isn't the right place for everyone.
As you mentioned, sometimes adult children would far rather have their parent "well cared for" and in a situation where they didn't have to worry so much. That's understandable. However, that may not be what the elder wants.
We all die. Your mother knew what she wanted and how she wanted that to play out. Bless her heart and her spirit. I'd have liked to have met her.
Carol
My daughter has a Power of Attorney that can be activated when I am infirm and cannot make financial (or other) decisions for myself. I have a Living Will that determines the type of management (and where!) I want.
After seeing my grandmother, and mother in law (as well as older relations) in Aged Care Facilities (some bad some reasonable) I have clearly made known my attitude to being placed in a Nursing Home.
Regardless of my health needs, I have placed my dignity and my choice above these considerations and yes I do know that it may have a negative impact on me. However, no one lives forever and when I do die, I plan to die at home with all my photos and cherised memories around me in comfort and in my own clothes at my own pace.
My daughter understands this position and exactly why I hold it and she will uphold my wishes, even without the Living Will (Enduring Power of Authority) in place.
There is no guilt on those parties that respect your wishes to stay at home and not be placed against your will in nursing homes. By all means make suggestions and assist where possible but allow your elderly or frail relatives to have their dignity and final choices about their life.
I will take these into consideration. My mom is able to get along at home but there are stairs, and I know she will have a fall. I have been trying to get her to let me make some arrangements about healthcare and a Durable POA for her. No luck.
She now has a pacemaker, (along with a moniter to take readings) and she has been abusing her medication for pain.
I think she has panic attacks, she claims they help settle her. However they make her dizzy. Last night there was a false call to 911 because her heart moniter was taking a reading. The EMT had never seen one of these and took an ekg with all her vitals. She was fine. She signed the release for care and it was all over. I set my numbers with the information along with the Doctor's number on the information for the moniter. I ask her why she did not give them the Medical Device ID card she had. O, I forgot, was all she said.
My question is how many times can this happen before they suggest she needs assisted living or skilled care. My dad was a veteran, so this idea does help.
She has no life insurance, but has medicare, and will be 80 this November.
When you get guardianship for the loved one in the latter situation, you can still respect any and all choices they are capable of making - like what to eat, what to wear, what activities to participate in, and respect their wishes on any limitations of medical care. And so many of our loved ones are somewhere between those extremes, so it is very hard to decide what help to provide whether they want it or not, and what to hold back on until the necessity is a greater force.
She has not been a part of my life for over 20 yrs. now and she thinks she was the most hard done by -- "I should KNOW she can't travel" (can't... won't - there is help for fear of planes etc..) We get along well, because I have learned how to de-escalate confrontation and she has learned, over the yrs.. that I won't get sucked in to the anger & drama.
She is of sound mind, sharp as a tack - she is depressive and always HIGH anxiety .. from a highly dysfunctional family upbringing.... I have learned through personal development to move to the positive and change my attitude. She hates hearing that she has choices ... Lordy, if you want to get a MOUTHFUL tell her she has choices ... (I say, you might not like them all, but you have them !) Anyway... she still stays in her huge townhouse, getting worn down, taking the bus (2 buses) to the mall for groceries, dentist, Dr. etc... At least she continues to see the Dr.... I have me them and they know how she is... it's challenging, I know unfortunately something will happen to her before & she'll HAVE to make a move, like another person said and I have said to my mom & her Dr. -- 'what you value the most is your independence, you'll have it unexpectedly taken from you UNLESS you are proactive instead of reactive ! (she won't even allow any help in the house that she doesn't know - like me or a neighbour - but they can't do something nice for her ... oh no!) Signed, VERY frustrated in B.C. , Canada
It's about rights and sometimes that means a right to make the wrong decision. We can hope that the event that changes things won't be too horrible. But if we say that we'll help when they want it and they won't do anything different, sometimes we have to live with their decision.
Take care, all of you. You're doing great!
Carol
She's a heavy smoker In her house and spills everyone she puts her hands on. How do we get her help or move her into assisted living she she says "no" to everything reasonable??? Please help my daughter before she has a breakdown.
Admit to her that the part about her falling making her a ward of the state was a bit of an exaggeration, that you are just worried about her and want her to be careful. She KNOWS you want to take her independence away from her, and she wants it to last as long as it can. It sounds like she stopped driving which is good. Encouarge Renee to say no to being the taxi driver when she really can't do it, though it is an advantage to having someone in the doctor's office with her so more of the truth might be told. There are ways to modify things and prevent falls that could be done at home if someone will permit them. Maybe if she feels less threatened she would let an occupational therapist in the place and see what could be done..
and that I'm trying to make him crazy.I contacted his GP in 2010 (after I'd returned from visiting my Mom in the Caribbean) and asked for him to arrange an assessment for my husband, as he was making accusations and seeing and hearing things that did not exist. He promised to check him out on his next visit,
when my husband returned from his visit, his words were Dr so and so gave me a good checkup and there's absolutely nothing wrong with me, and if I can get to his office and not get lost I am fine.He has since change doctors, 2 years ago he started seenig people coming into our home and stealing his records,
clothes, tools and messing with his stereo equiptments, mind you these things are ancient. I went with him to one of his appointments with his new GP to voice my concerns, he told me that because they had found a menengioma
on my husband's last MRI he wanted to get to the root cause of his headaches, then he'll arrange for him to have an assessment. I'm at my wits end as nothing has been done and my husband is getting worse, telling people that I'm trying to poison him,and there's nothing wrong with him My husband is 85 and I'm 60
Any suggestion would be helpful.
My aunt broke her hip at 91. She needed help before then but wouldn't let anyone in the home. After her break and 91 day NH rehab stay, it was stay in the NH or come home with caregivers. She didn't want to stay so she has caregivers 21 hrs/wk, and several over the last 5 yrs. She agrees that breaking her hip, as bad as that was, was really the best thing that could have happened, because she has help, and now a ramp.
She falls occasionally because she tries to bend, stoop, or reach and can't. One of her caregivers asked, after a fall, when was I goibg to put her in the nursing home? I said she'll put herself in one. I don't have the power. Hopefully it won't come to that. I do have the power to make medical decisions if she is unable. But she is very good. If I say she needs to go to the doctor, she goes or he comes to the house if weather is bad.