My 93 year old mom lives with my brother. Due to swallowing problems she only takes ensure. juice, and water. She will not drink well for him, she also will not get up and walk around in the house for exercise, she just sits in her chair or lays in her bed When I am there she will drink what I give her and will walk through the house with me. I use the approach of here is some juice for you to drink now, and I say here's your cane let's take a walk through the house. The minute I leave she goes back to just sitting there. What can I do to get her to listen to him?
Leave Mom alone. Care for her gently, but don't make her do anything she refuses. Wait a while. She may agree later. There are so few things she gets to choose these days. Let her choose how she spends the last days, weeks and months of her life.
Sometimes we need for a second to put ourselves in our elder's shoes... in their minds they are thinking my gosh we are living with our children... who's idea was this?... I don't like the music they listen to... don't like the TV shows they watch... and forget about the movies.
From what you describe, you actually DO the 'feeding' and exercise with her, whereas your brother is asking. At this age, you don't ask, you do.
As for her not wanting to eat or walk, perhaps it's because her body no longer needs the nutrients and/or the exercise. She may have an underlying medical condition and can't convey it. Or your brother may see her in a differently light than you, i.e., he lets her sleep, etc.
Perhaps you need to have a talk with your brother who is caring for her as to what he is seeing in his mother and how he feels about it.
1. Your responsibility becomes, NOT making them happy or doing what they want all the time, but KEEPING THEM SAFE
2. You get farther by giving choices, as you would a small child. If you want her to walk....find something she wants or enjoys...a certain treat that is in the kitchen...it then becomes, walk with me to the kitchen and I will fix you......whatever that treat is.... Or, as one suggested...a choice...walk now or in an hour...walk here....or walk there. Wear this or that? Do your exercises and then I'll massage your feet afterwards....if the massage is a big reward.
3. Do things 'because the doctor wants them to do it'....that line works wonders with my parents. They won't do much of anything that, I, their daughter who is a retired RN thinks is a good idea.....I am just the 'dumb kid' still, even at 71....but if I say, the doctor recommended it during the last visit....it will be acceptable.
4. Any big change...like bringing in a care giver, or trying day care program or new exercise or routine....tell them or ask them...to try it for a month to see if it helps and promise that if it's not helpful, they won't have to continue (of course depending on what it is .....). That is still a 'choice' for them....and with my folks and their dementias, I found that by the time a couple weeks went by, they were used to the change and forgot they had not been doing it forever. I was amazed at the first time I tried this, which was about bringing in a caregiver. My dad wanted no help...needed no help....and Mom wanted no other woman in her home doing anything, even though she knew she couldn't deal with Dad. But after a couple weeks, they were both in love with the woman we hired 'for just a month to see if it would help'.
5. I sold my parents on lots of things by telling them that if we came up with the plan and had an outside agency involved, it would keep the control with them, whereas, if someone in the neighborhood complained or had concerns about how they were functioning at home, and might call Adult Protective Services....THEN all control might be taken away....so we needed to agree on OUR plan to assure that THEY would stay in control of staying at home alone. These ideas have worked out pretty well for me....not perfect....and not all the time, but better than never getting something done that should be done!