My brother who is POA and Guardian has whipped my 77 yr old Dad up and put him in a home before he is ready. Two weeks ago my Dad had an infection and was bleeding from his penis. He went to hospital and while he had this infection he was also very hallucinatory. He already has dementia so this was not looking good. As he was getting better he was very aggressive and wanted to go home to Mum. His outbursts and trying to leave the hospital, even trying to get out a window, made him a high risk patient. All this frightened my 80 yr old Mother and she didn't want to take him home. It's so sad because the whole reason for his behavior was he wanted to go home with my Mum as he frets for her and she is the only person he remembers every minute of his day. He has now been put in a home and my brother, who has a controlling nature, did not have a family meeting to discuss Dad's care. He cancelled a meeting the Doctors were going to have with the family and refused to allow my Dad to go to one of my sister's to take him to her home and care for Dad. Now my sisters and him are in the hugest personal, tit for tat, vindictive, family feud. They won't be talking with my Mum and can't deal with seeing Dad in the home, so those two people will suffer for this. It is a mess. It is terrible to see Dad not understanding why he has gone into a hospital and then taken onto a home and never being able to return home with Mum and be with his dogs. My sister who wanted to care for him has a lovely country home with many animals and I would have liked to seen him given the chance to go there. I want to get Dad reassessed or examined by a medical professional of Dementia. My Dad is very capable, he can make his own coffee, wash dishes, shower and go to toilet by himself. He has said he isn't as bad as the other people in the home and he is right. They are really deteriorated. He said he feels like committing suicide. In Australia our laws are different to America. They may even be different in each state of Australia too but I don't know how to find out. I want to challenge my brother as he is so completely unreasonable and is very much enjoying telling us he is the boss of Dad and what he says goes. Someone please tell me what legal and medical help I can get to diffuse this situation. At the moment I am sitting on the fence to calmly look at all angles. I also don't want my brother to have any ammunition against me until I can research and get the advice I need.
You and your sisters should continue to support your Mum, and do your research about Guardianship. It's really out of your brother's hands. He signs the papers, and that is a hard hard thing to have to do.
Listen to Pam. As far as I'm concerned, she's one of our site experts. My only advice to you is not to fan the flames. Continue to be as neutral as you can. There's enough animosity already. Realize that your brother is probably doing exactly what he thinks is the right thing. That's why your dad chose him. It's not easy for him either.
What I want to address is what I see as the key of your message: "my 80 yr old Mother ... didn't want to take him home."
You think that Dad was not ready for placement for round-the-clock care. But generally the criterion for when is it time for placement of a married elder is "when the spouse can no longer provide adequate care." In a sense, it is more about whether Mum is ready than whether Dad is. I took care of my husband at home throughout his dementia journey. I was in my 60s, not my 80s. It is a 24/7 constant demand high stress situation. It has rewards, certainly. I am grateful I was able to do it. But if I had not been there and able to do it, he could have (and would have had to) be placed in a care center the first year he was diagnosed.
You have two parents in a world of hurt right now. They both need your help, your understanding, and your support. While you are sorting out the legalities and Dad is in a care center, be sure that mother gets to visit him as often as she wishes. Find out if she can bring a dog to visit him. Assure Mom that you are so grateful she was able to care for him as long as she was. Don't do anything to feed her inevitable feelings of failure or guilt.
Your dad can be reevaluated at any time. It can wait until the legalities are sorted out. As the infection is totally cleared up and his hallucinations clear up (we hope) and he calms down, it is possible that an evaluation will conclude he could be cared for in a private home, perhaps with some in-home care.
But, Mum is no longer able/willing to be his 24/7 caregiver. Believe me, caring for someone with dementia is only marginally easier when they can toilet themselves and do tasks like wash dishes. They still have dementia 24 hours a day. And dementia get worse. Always. He may improve dramatically when the infection is gone, but he will still have dementia and it will very definitely get worse.
So ... let us say that Dad gets another assessment and he COULD be discharged from the home. Where is he going to go? You suggest that he goes to one of his daughters. Maybe that would work and maybe that would be a disaster. Has that woman spent a lot of time helping Mum take care of Dad? Has Dad spend some time at her house so that Mum could have some respite? Or is this being proposed out of the blue, and this would be her first exposure to 24/7 dementia care? Does she have family living with her? Will her house accommodate a walker? A wheelchair? (That Dad doesn't need these now says nothing about the near future.) What will she do if he tries to escape out a window to go back to Mum and his dogs?
"Oh Dad isn't so bad. He can still take a shower and wash dishes," is wishful thinking. He might be better off than most of the people in the care center he is in. Someone always is the least afflicted and someone is always the most -- but that doesn't mean they don't belong where they are.
Brother may be so controlling for the wrong reasons, but that doesn't necessarily mean he is doing the wrong thing. As you are sitting on the fence trying to evaluate this, try to focus on what is best for your parents, and try to leave brother's annoying personality out of your considerations.
The really sad part is that the sisters won't visit Dad in the home and aren't talking to Mom - are they angry with her for not keeping Dad home? OMG, is there anything to be done about that? The estrangement of everyone is taking a tough situation and making it a hundred times worse for everybody. PLEASE, as Jeanne says, make sure your deep desire to avoid facility care is not based on wishful thinking...as hard as it is to see and recognize in your own parent, there is probably no way to reverse Dad's condition.
I suggest you make sure that your fathers doctor/ geriatrician is in regular contact with your father and brother so that you at least have another authoritve figure in the mix. And all siblings should put any alternative living plans to your brother and mother and so you can all workout what is best.
Your brother although controlling, may be thinking a home is best so that he is not laden with the caring role. If your sister wants to care for your father and that is what everyone else thinks is best for your father then your brother should listen and consider the option.
Good luck.
But, we're very fortunate in that the organisation that runs this place is first rate. My heart might sink at the thought of my mother having a close encounter with the lady who wanders round with her knickers at half mast, but I also know the staff will cope with it well. Attitude is everything. If you have confidence in the people looking after your dad, ask them about keeping him under review. They're likely to err on the side of caution, i.e. keep him in rather than discharge him only to have to bring him back before long; but if he definitely shouldn't be there, then they are the experts who will know.
Really, really good dementia care units, by the way, aim to conserve quality of life for as long as possible. Let them do their job. Resist the urge to spring him!
You and your husband bought your Dad a recliner as a present. Appropriate and very nice of you.
Sister wants to get a fridge for your Dad. Er, and who's paying? That's the thing. If she wants to buy him a fridge as a present, she needs to get clear specifications and make sure it's the right size and model - then it would be very nice of her, and not just a flaming nuisance. And if actually she's expecting to order the fridge for your Dad but claim the money back, then your brother is correct and she does need his go-ahead.
In other words, although there may be a dearth of diplomatic language right now, your brother is not control-freaking, he is anxious to do this very difficult job well.
Anyway, though, that's actually the easy bit.
Now look. There is a world of difference between challenging your brother's decision, and asking pertinent, reasonable questions - also known as taking a loving interest - about your father's care. What about having the delicate conversation with your brother where you set out the ground rules? I agree that you really don't want to start from "I don't want Dad to be in here, how often are we going to have him assessed so we can get him out?" - because your brother's got enough on his plate without having to cope with a huge helping of uncertainty. So: you act on the assumption that your father is currently in the correct care setting, you work with that to see what can be done to maximise his quality of life, and (keeping it quietly to yourself) you keep an eye open for evidence that his move has been premature. If and only if there is abundant, unambiguous evident of that sort do you then go to your brother, present it to him, and suggest that the care might want to be stepped down.
Most men like clear decision making in most things, and if you've got to do something unpleasant, like incarcerate your own father, you want to get it decided and done and no going back. This would explain why your brother is going at it like a train. If you can make it clear to him that you accept the decision and now aim to make it work well for your father (always keep the focus tightly on his benefit), maybe your brother will stop cutting you off in mid-sentence. Email can be useful! - he might delete it but at least he can't interrupt you :)
But going back a bit, the image of your lovely, free father out there on horseback surveying the bush? Enjoy the memories with him, stop pretending those days are coming back. It'll be easier on both of you.
ba8alou, yes, a small fridge is allowed, like the ones in a hotel. Lots of furniture is allowed. They tell us to make it as comfortable for him and as close to a home for him as we can. Dad's brain is not very broken at all. He just has short term memory loss with the Dementia, his long term memory is brilliant. He has lost a lot of use in his right hand since he had the stroke 3 years ago which is why I bought him a recliner that tilts a person up into a standing position. Dad was working on a Tomato Farm at the age of 74 when he had the stroke. Amazingly strong, hard-working man. He was always a worker-holic so maybe he doesn't have enough to occupy him and maybe this is the reason he won't settle.
Countrymouse, Sis is paying for the fridge with the right dimensions and I am delivering it as she lives in another state. It is her gift to Dad as she will not see him a much of us who are closer. Not sure where your comment 'But going back a bit, the image of your lovely, free father out there on horseback surveying the bush?' comes from, I haven't imagined Dad in a place like that ever but he did like horses and still draws them very well with a numb hand. The only place I want to imagine and see him in is a happy place without all the lies and without being surrounded by people worse than him. If I could have him in a place where he is with people who have the same Dementia like himself then I too would be in a happy place. There is not one person Dad can have a conversation with at the home other than the staff. I do hope there's a happy ending to his story. Cheers!
Mom was home and did not bathe and got a skin fungus. Red Flag.
Mom can tell me all about the Depression and the War and the 50's.
Ask her how she fell at the Mall and she has no idea what happened. Ask her what she had for lunch. She will ask when is lunch. Red flag.
You want Dad happy again? Be ten years old. Yah, I know, I can't do that either. Love him where he is and what he is and set the rest aside.
I'm wondering why your brother has a registered active guardianship for your father if your mother is still living at home, and is fit and well, is she?
I know you said your sisters aren't speaking to your mother over this (heavy sigh) - but what about you? What's your take on what your mother is thinking?
I'm sure she does have horribly mixed feelings about the decisions she's having to make. One thing it might be helpful to remind her of is that sometimes all of the available options are pretty rubbish. You can only pick from the ones that are there, and it is better to err on the side of caution. Supposing she brought her husband home, then had to pack him off again three days later? Or tried to care for him and injured herself, or fell ill?
The POA mess must be a huge pain but it's nobody's fault. Gosh how I love new systems! Sofis I think you're doing a great job - I learned a new Winston Churchill saying the other day which seems apt: "when you're going through Hell, keep going." At least while your father's being cared for things will have a chance to settle down, and then you can all look around and see if anything better is available. Best of luck x