She has stopped washing her clothes, she doesn't do dishes, she doesn't vacuum, dust, or even put things away. She makes her bed, but she hasn't changed the linen in ages. She always combs her hair and puts on a little makeup (still well-executed) when she goes out, but will wear a shirt and jeans covered with stains from gardening, spills, and just wearing them for days and days. I've tried suggesting, gentle teasing, leading questions ("Do you know where your other jeans are? Maybe you can put them on and toss these in the wash?") and even threats ("If you don't start doing this more for yourself, I have to bring someone in to do it for you.") I have 3 jobs and can't clean her apartment AND my house. She can't afford anything that isn't covered by medicare/medicaid, and most of all, she becomes RABID when I mention bringing anyone in to help her. It would be a complete meltdown if a home helper came in and tried to clean for her or do her wash. Any ideas?
Discuss her current status with her doctor. You cannot provide the services that Mother needs. That is perfectly understandable. But someone needs to provide supervision, cleaning, and grooming help. Do what you have to do to arrange that.
The not washing/changing/cleaning is new - like in the last couple of months - and prior to that, she'd been on a several-year plateau in terms of getting any worse in her dementia. We had quite a long run - almost 3 years - where she was no worse than when she was first diagnosed. I have a call in to a local organization that helps keep people at home and helps with chores, personal care, etc... and I hope to talk to them after the holiday. She's VERY resistant to any help and will NOT allow anyone in to her apartment to "treat her like a stupid old woman" (her favorite way to describe how "everyone treats her".
She has no money, and I don't have any to give her, so her going to live anywhere else is not happening. I keep her place from being anything worse that just cluttered, but it's a huge fight every time. She doesn't like other old people, so any of the places where she could go and hang out with other people during the day are a no-go. I've tried.
I'll report back after the "keep people at home" organization calls me back on Monday. I hope they have answers. I see from their website they accept medicare/medicaid as payment for their services, and I know they bring in someone from the Dept of Aging to assess (THAT'LL be a fun visit), so hopefully they can provide some of the help she needs that I can't provide.
Thanks...
A new doctor will be a big help, although if I lied and said we were going to the store or something and then turned up at a doctor's she'd pitch a fit about me lying. She has no memory for anything short-term (where we're going, what's happening today, what she did yesterday, conversation details, etc... but she's not easily fooled and she notices facial expressions, fake smiles, sounding "too chirpy" (when I force a happy voice to avoid sounding annoyed, etc...). The one place I called about in-home help does bring in a Dept of Aging person to assess the person, so that'll be a big help (though she'll be a complete b*tch about it the day of) in terms of figuring out exactly what her status is, what services she needs, etc... without my either being in denial about or being too critical of her abilities.
She is going to resist and be a total horror next week when we take her over to the place that provides these services. I knew it would be even worse if they came to her apartment (or to my part of the house) because she'd feel "invaded" - but she will pitch a serious fit when we take her there to meet their staff next week.
I just need to steel myself for her response and tough it out. It's the only solution to her wearing the same clothes 24 hours a day (she doesn't even put on pajamas anymore) and not bathing or cleaning anything. She was about to drink coffee out of a mug that had god-knows-what floating in it last night, and got really mad when I made her give it to me and I poured it out and washed it. What am I supposed to do? Let her get sick? She weighs nothing, so a good bout of food poisoning could kill her.
I'm at the end of my rope, my patience, and my desire to coddle her feelings. Her health and overall well-being have to take precedence over her desire to deny she has any deficits from Alzheimer's.
See All Answers