*I want to stay home*. I get that.. but what does the *as long as I can* actually look like?
Not being able to shower or dress? Collect shopping? Prepare meals? Can get Aides to visit for that.
Not able to change soiled continance aides? Put rubbish out, clean up? Yuk but not life threatening. Can wait for next Aide visit.
Not being able to get out of bed to let the Aide in the door to do these things?
I think we've crossed that line of *as long as I can* now. She just doesn't get it.
So my question is: is there a list from APS (or Human Services or wherever) of minimum standards to stay living alone? I found a hospital discharge questionaire but have lost it - inc ADLs, falls risk, poly meds.
I have advised her Doctor, had an OT assessment done. Both recommend assisted living (ignored). Suggested a key box (refused). Calls ambulance when fallen but keeps refusing to be taken to hospital.
Yes I am waiting for that hospital admit!!! Then me & my point of view decend on the discharge planner & request a social worker, stat. I cannot prevent a solo taxi ride home but certainly won't be the driver/welcome party/enabler. Will make very to her & hospital staff (letter already sent to her Doctor) - I won't be doing any hands-on care, driving, food or medicine deliveries as this just prevents obtaining the proper care & supervised setting she needs.
If you pick one up and then show it to her - it would be fairly clear that it isn't likely to be "broken into." She may be thinking it is a box of some kind.
As another said, get the kind with a key and a keypad - so the code can be used in emergency and changed later (good for when no key is available at the time of need.)
Last I saw these things (generally used by Real Estate agents when selling a house. You could mention this to mom as well, these are used ALL the time without mishap!), they can be locked over the door handle - you don't have to nail it to the wall....
I would only tell her that a key is used to open it to get the key to the house - leave out the code part, as that will just add to confusion and perhaps increase her anxiety.
Breaking into that would be more difficult than just breaking into/picking her own existing lock - you can tell her that when you show her the lock box and explain it!
You CAN use a key, but you can also key in a number combination (most use a 5 digit code--we used mom's birthdate). In case of a 911 call, you can give the dispatcher the code for EMS to use--the code can then be changed to something else. It gave us much peace of mind.
Until yesterday I had been considering just nailing that blooming key box on her wall myself! But she is worried it will be broken into & she will be robbed (would be MY fault of course).
I don't know if she is capable of comparing the risk/outcome: being stuck in bed (soiled) vs key box robbers ??
But going to try BarbB's approach at today's visit... what a shame you don't have help to get out of bed when you need it. What a shame the Aide can't get in & you will miss your shower, getting dressed/housekeeping/driving to wherever you wanted to go that morning. Wonder what YOU can do about that? If she is stuck for ideas, I'll mention Santa's elves ha ha!
You know what? The damn anxiety drives me absolutely batty! When I read the remark about fearing that someone may break in, geeeeeeez, that is exactly how my mom is! What if? What if? What if? They say this constantly! Fear everything! I feel your pain, honey.
I told her primary doc to give her anxiety meds! Hahaha. She said because of mom’s current meds that mom would have to see a neuropsychologist to make sure the meds did not interfere with each other. She takes Parkinson’s meds and seizure meds.
Hubby’s grandma was like that. Big two story uptown home that she just had to live in. When I took her shopping it was a pain. Lug all the groceries upstairs because the bottom of her home she converted to her art studio where she painted.
She painted beautifully but wouldn’t part with any of them because she was so attached to them she couldn’t put a price on them. The family has most of them. She donated several of them to different organizations.
They had money so the bulk of the caregiving was done by caretakers. She had a housekeeper as well. I took over running errands with her when her daughter, hubby’s mom became sick with lymphoma.
You sound like a very strong & determined person - all the best!
Ask her what living at home safely "for as long as she can" means to her. Outline the problems you, doctor and OT see. Home health care agencies usually have checklists like you describe. An agency can help list mom's needs and the resources and costs for their services. ALF can also do similar evaluations and provide estimates/price list for services. Be realistic about what you can provide to help out and what additional help mom needs to stay in her home.
It is possible to let her stay home with help. My MIL lives in a condo in Hawaii. She had round the clock home aides for many months. She now has a live-in caregiver. Expensive but my FIL's life insurance is paying for it. She is also on a wait list for Adult Day Care. No matter which direction you go, consistent communicating with care providers is essential as mom's health declines.
I recently applied for Medicaid just waiting for ‘accept’ or ‘declined’.
Thank you.
Sometimes it just helps to write to someone that may see this or not. Siblings have stopped calling or asking questions. To much drama? Same ole same ole? Meanwhile for me I never know which Mom I’m getting from 1 day to the next.
I would override the lock-box. There may come a need for that - if she balks, ask her if she'd rather have a busted down door or a lock-box and just put it there.
I would also install cameras in non-private areas, so you can monitor things remotely. We installed some to check on who is coming in, but it revealed some OCD behavior that started (possible sun-downers in her case) where she would check the door lock, sidelights, something in the kitchen (later identified as the dishwasher) and whatever in the LR (lights reflected off kitchen cabinets via pass through from kitchen to dining area.) Clearly not normal behavior when it became a nightly marathon! This started with a few iterations a few nights, but evolved into repeating all the above over and over for 1-1.5 hours EVERY night! I also noted that she was wearing the same clothes over and over, up to six days, sometimes soiled - this from a woman who changed outfits daily, had more outfits and clothes than TJs and Marshalls, a different one for every possible occasion!!
There's no mention of any cognitive issues for your mom - even with a Dx of dementia, we can't force anyone to move if they refuse (been there, done that - EC atty said NO.) Also, if no cognitive issues, seeking guardianship may well be a waste of time and money as well. Refusing to move or allow help to come in are not likely going to be enough criteria to get guardianship granted. If the calls to EMS are enough (can you get a report on how often they have been called over a given time period?), combined with some eval from OT and perhaps APS, indicating the place is not cared for (trash piling up, living in soiled undies/clothes, unwashed, etc) may help push that guardianship forward. You would be well-advised to get a consult with EC atty (usually first is free, maybe 30-60 min - check first!) If you do go, make a list of questions to ask, and prioritize it in case you run out of "free" time.
I really don't think there's a list or any one or more issues that determine when the move is advised. In her case, falls, being unable to dress properly (can't get her shoes on?), etc - many of those things you listed are considered ADLs and when someone cannot perform the simplest of them, it is likely time. However, that brings you back to the pickle. You can't force her to move. Even with dementia you can't. I would think EMS might get tired of having to pick her ass up off the floor, but who knows - maybe they don't get a lot of calls and jump at the chance!
Making a detailed list of what she can/can't do and reviewing it with her doctor could help. Doc is likely only be able to recommend AL, but if he can get APS assessment ordered, based on what you have listed, they may have more clout. Never had to go that path (mom's plan had included AL until the dementia kicked in and her view of herself and her abilities were warped.) We had to come up with a ruse to get her to move (cellulitis just before the move, YB drafted a "letter" from "Elder Services" at the hospital, telling her she either goes where we choose or they will move her.) All a big fat lie, but she fell for it - VERY unhappy about it, but reluctantly moved. She still begged to go back to the condo.
BTW, our mom was not even close to where yours is... Short term memory loss, eating crap (couldn't follow directions for cooking), messing up finances, some OCD night behavior, wearing the same clothes over and over, bad hearing/forgetting to replace the hearing aid battery, turning the phone ring off or leaving it somewhere unknown, etc. I felt it wasn't safe for her to stay there (none of us was "around the corner" if she needed help.) The only other suggestion is to give her an ultimatum, but she chooses: 1) allow hired help in for as many hrs as YOU determine, or 2) move to AL. She says 1 and then doesn't let them in, #2.
That being said I haven't found many Doctors that even like to get Hospice involved until it's way past a sensible time.
You could try calling DCF and see if they are welling to do an in-home evaluation, keep in mind your loved one may figure out it was you and you could create a bunch of resentment in this process.
My heart goes out to you for the journey you're still on. We just can't prevent it all. Just share the path & offer kindness I suppose.
This is extremely hard on the nerves of anybody, especially you, who cares what happens to her. You are the one who has to live with the daily anxiety of hearing that she's had a terrible fall, or of not hearing from her when you expect to, or of getting a call from an accusatory-sounding neighbour who demands to know what you're "doing about her."
But it is still Not Your Life and Not Your Decision.
Sigh.
So, she calls the ambulance to help her up off the floor, then?
And if she can't get to the door to let the aides in and she won't have a key box, how does she think they'll get in - down the chimney, like Santa and his caregiver elves?
Is there anybody she *would* trust with a key (not counting you)?
What about calling the OT again, and telling her - keep your voice neutral - that AL has been decidedly refused; and that being so what adaptations, equipment and alerts could she recommend that might help meanwhile.
If she can afford help at home, then the risk factor is reduced because there is someone there to help her. To be honest, even with someone there, its not foolproof that she'll never fall again. The difference is that someone will be there to assess whether she needs medical help and it can be called immediately without delay. If there is no help and no one to check on her regularly, then she could lay in pain for days.
If she is refusing basic safety measures, you can lay it on the line for her. It's either the safety measures or you go to a facility, because the safety measures are the only things keeping you at home. I had to do this with my mother. She has no money for in home care. She's in an subsidized senior apartment. They only way her doctors felt she could stay at home was if I installed cameras in the home and check on her every day, multiple times a day. So if she did fall, I could call help to her. Sometimes they would rather stay at home and deal with the minor inconveniences than accepts going to a facility.
She is in an inertia phase where any change is an automatic 'no' so now you must do what is best for her not what she wants to do - just the refusal of the lock box should have shown that - yes it is hard but a side benefit is that you will sleep at night
Your mom is past the point that she should be in care by some months - remember it is not you placing her there but her behavior so don't guilt yourself out about it because basically SHE IS NOT SAFE ALONE - she could burn down the house by leaving an appliance on overnight & she wouldn't respond to it appropriately
I have a relative who is considering taking care of her father instead of finding her own place. My advice was to go to the key rack on the wall and take the keys to the truck and move her stuff to a cute apartment. She is too young to ruin her life. Her mother is running a huge guilt trip on her so she has not left yet.
My folks aged at home until it was almost too late. They refused any help and I was about to turn them over to the state but mom finally had the big fall and I moved her from the hospital to assisted living and then moved dad a few days later. There was no way to keep them home at that point even if we’d had the money for 24/7 in home care. They had a tiny house, tiny barely functional bathroom and the whole place was falling down despite my efforts to fix everything.
People just live too damn long these days. Outlive their money and any quality of life. My mom had 5 bad years and then 5 horrible years of falls, pain, sickness and depression. Those 10 years were made possible by all the modern meds and surgeries that are now available. But what ya gonna do? Deny mom and dad heart meds?! I’m tough but not that tough.
Mom died over a year ago. Dad is wasting away in a memory care facility, he gets good care but it’s not life. He’s 89, excellent vitals, eats, poops, sleeps, repeat.......Good lord. How much longer....
Ive been hanging around this forum off and on for a few years now. I’ve read the hundreds of nightmare live in caregiver horror stories. New waves coming in regularly. People totally unprepared and caught off guard. Promised to never put mama in a nursing home. How do I convince dad he can’t drive.......I was a rookie too a few years ago. But I read articles on this site. Took some good advice from people and acted on it. This forum can be frustrating at times but it sure saved my ass on more than one occasion.
its clear to me that careing for very old and disabled people in their/your home hardly ever works unless you have some very deep pockets which most of us don’t. The Bush And Kennedy families can do this. Probably have full time docs and intensive care units on site at the family estate. Most others......How can I get someone to fix the plumbing and put in grab bars for free?? If your asking those kinds of questions home care is not an option for your family.
And as long as I’m ranting a bit, I’d like to see shorter and more direct responses to questions. Fill out your profile so people can see your basic situation. Then you don’t have to repeat your caregiving history in every post. (Oops. I just did that here....)
I think it is an evil plan by the government to kill off many of the boomer caretakers before SS runs out. HaHa.
I was just learning about dementia in those days. It was quite clear dad had dementia, no short term memory etc, but mom had me faked out for years. She was well aware of time, date, place, news events and so on but had no executive reasoning whatsoever. I would argue with her for hours about the pills, using her walker, time to bathe....
I finally realized I had to just do what had to be done. Damn the torpedoes. She was mad, cried and hated me to her death after I put her in assisted living.
Some folks who lived through the Depression, saw the importance of setting up Wills and Trust, Living Wills, planning for funerals and burial, and being sure they had POA's in place—making it so much easier for their children and grandchildren! Others (like my uncle who made no plans and gave away huge amounts of money to his adopted son and grandchildren) had to become wards of the State through DSS Custody. He could not live alone! He could not care for his wife! He refused all help! He now lives in a Memory Care Unit of an Assisted Living Facility—no longer able to make decisions and not even able to plan a memorial service for his wife of 65+ years who passed a week ago.
While we may not be able to control our future care, we can do some preplanning that will help our loved ones and will possibly make our care more in line with what we know will be best for our family and ourselves (not necessarily our highest desire of living—forever in my own home).
Thanks for making us laugh, though, it is a great relief as we read about these very difficult situations!
I have told my mom she can stay home with me as long as possible. I said, jokingly, that after 10 years with dementia care, I'll be done. Who knows if I could actually last that long!
I think the trigger for me will really be more in the incontinence arena, especially on the bowel side. I just won't be able to physically or emotionally deal with that and she will ultimately end up in a NH when/if that happens.
My daughter, a RN, has agreed to take me in when I need it, decades from now. She's worked in an AL facility so she knows a good deal of what she'd be getting herself into.
Best to wish you never need to worry about it - plan for the future, but none of us knows what is in store for us.