My mom has always been anxious, but it beginning to be uncontrollable. She broke her hip in July and the problem got worse after she left rehab. She is now calling me 30+ times a day, just to hear my voice. I am her care giver, and like many of you, have an a**hole brother who does nothing for her, not even visit. Of course, he lived off my parents for years. Now that I think of it, he rarely calls her, so that's a clue. I can tolerate a few call during the day, but 30 calls seems excessive. She is in independent living, and persuaded the administrator to call me because she was sure I was dead! I turned off my phone due to a doctor's appointment. When in rehab her anxiety was so apparent the doctor ordered an antidepressant. She would fight it so it did no good, forcing me to take her cell phone. I am now forced to turn mine off for part of the day to get some peace. Any comments or observations?
She is 93, has lived with us for 10 years, and had a stroke 2 years ago. No physical after-effects from the stoke - only mental. No short-term memory at all, medium-term is spotty, and she is not well oriented. She often doesn't know where she is or how she got here, and has to ask who I am. Once we re-establish those basic facts, she is fine until the next day.
Given all those things, I guess I would be anxious too.
My mom always thinks I'm dead. She hates when I leave the nursing home I put her in because I have to come to my dark empty apartment - sure I was her caretaker for 10 or 15 years, I've lost track and being alone was weird at first but I kind of like it. I just wish my parking spot wasn't in an alley. I REFUSE to get a roommate. I'm over 40 for God's sake. If I meet a guy then we'll see but I kind of like it.
Back to my mom currently she is on Aricept, Lexapro, Seroquel, Buspar, Ativan as needed and her blood pressure meds. She has been on the Lexapro for anxiety for years way before dementia was even a thought in the furthest reaches of my mind. I think it stopped working. The do that sometimes. I want a psych to remove it or switch it because she is depressed and now she had gone from me being dead to me abandoning her in the home. I would love to bring her home but I can't. It's just me and I am 25 years from retirement. It's 70 for Gens X and Y. Unlike Litldogtoo, we (I) am still working on the perfect cocktail. Oh yes, the Seroquel is one of the bad for seniors with dementia ones but I think it gets a bad rap, the company was marketing it for off label use and got in trouble.
"It is unkind to both you and your mother to live this way when it can be prevented."
Are you sure it can be prevented? If your parent's doctor pooh-poohs things (found out via another incident how flaky she was, anyway, so haven't been back there), and your mother refuses to budge (you cannot carry her!) to see another doctor, especially since her doctor says there's no need ... is further pain, suffering due to her state in which she refuses to cooperate with you when you want her to go somewhere else, really preventable? Her separated-35-yrs+ spouse (tho' not divorced) spouse isn't here to deal w/it ... I feel like I'm left having to deal w/what he should be dealing with ... with no authority to do so, but left to bear the brunt of the whole situation.
Just how preventable ... ?? It will continue as is until ... until something finally shows up that's bad enough for someone else to intervene ... for her to realize she HAS to listen, has to go see another doctor (which might at least calm down some of the daily junk, w/help?). Just the other day just one of the things made itself evident again: I start getting some things from the fridge for dinner, tho't they seemed a bit warm ... looked, & she'd turned it way down (again) ... "to save energy." Hey, Ma! You'll wreck many more $$$ FOOD than the few pennies energy you'll save~ "DON'T turn the fridge down again. You WRECK FOOD that way!" Don't even feel like buying any decent meat now, after that happened again. Ought to buy just veggies, etc, that won't be harmed so much if warm too long ... you don't know when she might do it again! I'd like to make it to somehow NOT be able to be turned down w/the thermostat that's too handy ......
That's only one of a multitude of things that occur .........
How about making a CD of your voice for her to have or some movies that she can watch of you now? We have all this new tech., use it to your & her advantage.
Thing is the place your mom is at...isn't helping her the way she needs them to.
I took a dry erase board and wrote on it that she could call me at 11:00 am, 5:00 pm, and 10:00 pm. I also wrote if there was an emergency, she could dial 911 at any time. I put the dry erase board by her phone and a clock. She did adhere to this (for a few days at least.)
That landline will also come in handy if there is a 911 emergency at your home, as the fire/police dispatcher will know in an instant your home address.... even if you are unable to speak.
I would have her memory checked. Some people can cover up memory loss pretty well until it gets very bad.
My mom thought people were dead until doctors got her meds straight, and this included psychiatric medications, one of which is supposed a drug that 'dangerous' with people with dementia. We weighed the benefits, the quality of life it would give her, versus the downsides.
It's been a year. There has been no downside. At one time I tried to wean her off this, but the paranoia (i.e., dead thinking) came back. Right back on the drug, on which she will stay.
Not saying this is the problem. Just stating what we did. She's 91, mixed dementia, was in diapers in the hospital on her way to a nursing home. Got her out, has never had an accident, wears underwear, but after a year, there is cognitive decline which is to be expected. Does she drive me nuts? Yes! All the time.
How long was she on the anti depressant? It takes at least six weeks for it to work. It may have been the wrong anti depressant. You don't tell them they're taking it, you just give it to them. Don't know how that works in assisted living, but it works we me at home. Different people - different classes of drugs.
A doctor is not the person to give an anti depressant. You may need to find a geriatric psychiatrist or at least a psychiatrist with some sort of background dealing with people who are older. You're mom may have the beginning of dementia? Has she been tested?
I think once a day is reasonable. 30 times a day is way out of control. And don't break down and answer. If she has called you, for example, 13 times that day and you answer on the 14th time your mom gets the message that it takes 14 calls to get you to the phone.