My mom lives alone in an apartment. We have hospice coming in but she is getting so bad she can't even get out of bed. I work and Hospice doesn't have enough services to look out for her several times a day. She doesn't want to go into a nursing home and I can't make her. There is no POA.
I respectfully disagree. I am just about at this point with my mom. The sole caregiver. No one else except paid helpers in her home. I know if/when I get to this point, I will have NO guilt about an outside placement. I believe God has a life plan for each of us. Personally, I don't believe that for me it is "to sacrifice my life" for my 90-year-old mom, for whom I already have sacrificed many years of my life - basically she wouldn't probably still be here if it wasn't for my sacrifice. As has been said many times, every situation is unique and the solution is rarely clearcut, black and white. I would never advocate sacrificing your life for another unless it is throwing yourself in front of a car to save the life of a child about to be run over or some such thing. Just my opinion.
I've sometimes considered that family caregivers could actually be doing a disservice to their parent. If a parent was in AL, then they would have incentive to get up and dressed. There would be people their own age about. They wouldn't be sitting in their pajamas in front of a TV all day long, waiting for God.
I do wish these places were more affordable. It is a question that I wish someone would ask the presidential candidates. They talk about war and healthcare, but no one asks about the problems of aging.
When my mom was first driven to the nursing home she was to live in she raised a fuss - within 15 minutes she was saying how nice it was - she still asks to move to 'her own place' - she denies needing help ... legally low vision/blind, diabetic, in wheelchair [acquired brain injury], incontinent etc ... but she thinks she doesn't need help ...dahhhh
When she was there for a few months, she said she loved having 'things to do' & was never bored - now she can't remember when she goes to activities - they keep track of what she participates in & I find she is at more than 1 activity a day - like bingo [number & spacial recognition], music, cookie baking etc
When your mom needs the help, she will not say 'I want to go to a nursing home' as her cognificate abilities will be gone - mom will soon be 91 - with all her problems, she swears she doesn't need help & can live on her own - if I allowed that I could be charged with elder abuse due to abandonment!
I have resolved not to feel guilty when mom asks for something she can't reasonably have - someone said that a person with dementia is a 3 years old that has much experience - I bring a treat to start our visit well - she now associates me with a positive experience rather than negative which is good
We [caretakers] have to stop being the 'child' but assume the parental role but in as gently way as possible - their experience will sometimes resurface but that is to be expected - try to be gentle as possible, but be kind while doing gentle nudging them where they must head to
Your mom might eventually need to go into a nursing home, so prepare yourself - if possible have her go for 'respite' while you are away a few times so that she gets used to situation - I heard of 1 [initially reluctant] person who at end of second time said 'must I go home .. it's so much more fun here'
Change is hard at their age, so reluctance is to be expected & money can be an issue depending where you live - however if you ever think you need to take a short nursing course to cope with the higher nursing skills she needs, then you have reached your limit of personal care & maybe professionally trained people are needed - don't buy into familial guilt that it's 'your duty' - I firmly believe mom has lived longer & better than if I was her only [untrained] caregiver ... think about it long & hard as all who are on this site have done for our loved ones - good luck but remember you are not alone there are hoards of us who have 'been in the trenches' too
I really hope I don't live past my sell by date, or I am cognizant enough of my own infirmities to place MYSELF somewhere.
End of the day--you CAN'T make your mom do anything. You'll drive yourself crazy trying and harm the relationship in the process.
Tell her that you want someone to help care for her that will do a good job and that the best place for her would be in a"Care Center" (maybe don't call it a nursing home since she has what I consider outdated feeling about many of them).
But when she is better and you can care for her she can come home.
Not an out and out lie since I am sure if she got better you would bring her home.
Hospice Nurse and Social Worker can help explain this to her.
Your other option.....
The funds that would be used to care for her in a facility is it possible that they could be used to get her care in the house for the hours you can not care for her. Either over nights if that is when she needs and you need more help or during the day. YOu could get a good caregiver for less than the cost of a Nursing Home. And she will feel more comfortable.
There is a trade off...you have a "stranger" in your house and you do need to make sure that you do background checks if you hire privately. Going through an agency is easier but a bit more expensive.
We finally arranged for a nurses aid to watch her while I went to a Dr.'s appointment. Mother's bed was dry when I left. I found out 1 month later that it was dry when the first Nurses Aid left. The second Nurses Aid assigned that morning and the supervisor reported that I left Mother in a wet bed. Mother did not have an incontinence problem. It was a lie to give an excuse to tell me to take Mother to the Emergency Room at the nearby hospital or to the facility Health Care Center or the facility would call the police on me. The Emergency Room Dr was angry and put it in the report that there was no reason to send Mother to the Emergency Room or to put her in the Health Care Center and no reason why Mother could not go back to her Independent Living Apartment. My brother and cousin who have little to no communication with my Mother backed the facility that Mother should be in Personal Care. I did not sign the admission contract when the facility refused to give me a copy to review by myself or to take to an attorney. The facility Administrator sent it to my brother who signed it against my advice. I am the Health Care Power of Attorney and still cannot get a copy of the contract. It is 2 1/2 months later, Mother has not got back to 200 yards in the walker. She gets 50 yards, She would sleep most of the day every day if she could. When she sleeps most of the time she looses muscle tone. There are certain things that motivate her to get out of bed. She likes to sing gospel songs and sing old time songs from a song book, ea at once a week planned activity. She likes being with the ladies in the dining room for meals but often wants to leave without eating. The food is often pretty bad. When this happens, we bring in food or go out to eat which is several times a week. She likes to go for rides listening to Frank Sinatra tapes or to go to the pet groomers or vets with the cat. I am there every day. The facility snaps out at the height of Mother's exurberance and brings her down to where she wants to get back in bed and she quits eating time and again. Each time this happens it is harder and longer until we can get her up and active again. For example, a male friend of hers in Independent Living asked her and myself for dinner. It is in the resident handbook that this is permitted. Mother and I had been to dinner with him the previous month and mother paid for herself and myself. As she was getting dressed, excited, the I.L. Activities Director and the Nurses Aid supervisor who made the false accusation that I left Mother in a wet bed, pounded on Mother's door and they were both yelling at us that the director of Personal Care called them that we were not permitted to go to dinner with Mother's friend in I.L., that we were living it up to much, going out to much, etc., etc., and they accused us of mooching off of this gentlemen. That our activities were going to be curtailed. The facility wants her lying in bed, available for their convenience and they have even yelled at her when she and I have gone out of her apartment in the walker. When I was taking with her Physical Therapist at an outside facility and they suggested it. To sum it up, in my experience and from contacts whose parents are in different facilities, these facilities have nothing to loose when your parent dies, they just fill their space with the"next." They don't feel your loss. To the above, answer, don't feel guilty. I have seen that no matter how much a loved one protects and cares for their parent, spouse, child,or any loved one there is often that creeping guilt that you could have done more when they pass. Grief counseling or group can help one get over that. You did your best.