Three siblings living in the same town care for and see their mother with Alzheimer's regularly. A fourth sibling visits several times a year from out of town. The fourth sibling sees the decline more than the ones that see her regularly. How can the fourth convince the three that the mother should not be alone. The stove and counter top appliances are functional presenting a danger.
I was one of the three local siblings. On the occasion of my mother's 80th birthday, several out-state-siblings came down for the party. One such sibling took my eldest sister aside and said "Mom has really declined. She shouldn't be living alone anymore." To which my sister replied "Oh, we totally agree. Are you taking her home with you?"
What I'm say is, it's easy to recognize that a parent may not be safe living alone. What's hard is to find a solution to the problem, especially when the parent has no funds, is unwilling to move, and nobody can or is willing to take on the 24/7 live-in caregiver role. Been there, done that, got the T-shirt.
I have to say I disagree that someone who only sees someone once a year can't see decline more than those who visit regularly. There are loads of people on this board who are beating themselves up because they didn't see the dementia sooner. You get used to something that happens little by little. It's not that they aren't doing a good job as caretakers. It's that the change was so incremental that it is hard to really see.
I would doubt that you are seeing the situation more clearly than the siblings that are caring for the parent. They probably see exactly what you see and have made their own decisions about how much they willing to contribute to Mom's welfare and safety.
Unless you are either offering to move in with Mom, or proposing a care home alternative that Mom can afford, I'd suggest you just keep your own counsel and let your siblings keep theirs.
Its really tough in a family. I'm sure there is resentment about the fourth sibling given they are not around as much. If at all possible, I would try and call a family meeting and hopefully have an independent third party there as well to help mediate.
With my own siblings I did the day to day care. But when things got tough there was arguments and silent treatments among the siblings. Hard to get everyone on the same page.
I hope the siblings can have an honest conversation with each other.
Everybody has their own perspective based on personal experience. You might think the out of town siblings would be more invested in their elderly parent based on your experience, but in my experience, that hasn't been the case.
My mother even said she didn't want to drive anymore, but I did nothing until she refused to drive anymore. I had to become her taxi driver (I have set strict boundaries about this, and she wasn't happy).
My mother should be in assisted living. I think my brothers are concerned when they think about it, but since I'm local, they are happy to keep it all in my wheelhouse.
My mother needs someone to monitor her showers, and could use help dressing. Several times now, she's burned stuff in the microwave. She has now said she won't cook spaghetti anymore, as the pot is too heavy. I'm not sure how she gets her big cups of coffee and tea to the table safely.
She has money to hire help, and refuses. Not even housecleaning help.
While I'm sure my brothers (well, 2 of the 3; 1 doesn't care at all) would LOVE it if I would help her by monitoring her showers, fixing her meals, helping her get dressed, etc., they wouldn't DARE mention it to me.
My mother, at almost 92, has no vision in one eye, very poor balance, poor hearing, atrial fibrillation (on blood thinners), neuropathy in her feet and lots of anxieties. She lives alone, housebound except for Mass, chair yoga/grocery trip afterwards. This is her choice. I've done plenty for her. And she tells me I don't do much at all for her.
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