She recently called the police to report her purse stolen and two days later remembered that she hid it. She accuses my husband and I of going into her house and swapping her "good" things with lesser items and we constantly get into arguments about this. She still pays her bills, shops, cooks, cleans and is very independent. I cannot get her to go to her doctor about this because she says it is everyone else but not her. We are all getting very frustrated and angry over this situation. How do we handle this behavior?
The fact that she is calling the police in a way is a good thing in that there will be an established record of her calls and that they are unfounded. You will need this if you decide to become her guardian or conservator.
At 94 she needs another level of care than what is happening now. Although you say she cooks, cleans, pays bills, well that's all fine but what is her real cognitive ability.? The fact that she won't see a doctor and feels it's everyone else is a sign of impaired judgement. If there was an emergency could she deal with it? Does she have health issues that aren't being cared for because she won't go to a doc?
Do you have DPOA or MPOA? Are you a co-signer for her bank accounts and other financial issues or has she kept control of all this? If you have the POA's then you can have her moved into a facility or have a caregiver come on a regular basis to help her. But if she is going to fight this, then legally taking over for her via a guardianship is your only choice. You will need an elder care attorney to do this
as you have to appear before a judge and it's sticky.
The bigger question is what can you do......and what do you want to do? Sounds like your DH is over "mom". So if the choice is between him & mom, which is it?
So what is it and what can mom &/or you all afford for her care?
If she hasn't seen a MD, the first thing I would do is schedule an appointment with a gerontologist. UTI's do super strange stuff in the elderly so you need to rule that out plus find out what her overall health is. They will do a couple of tests, like the clock test and other mini-mentals on her to evaluate her cognitive capabilities. If your thinking she needs to go to a facility, what would be good is to call the ones you like and find out who is their medical director and make an appoint for her with those MD's. This can really speed up the processing of an admission application too. Then working back from the appointment date, start a diary of the inappropriate things she does and list what she can & can't do to give the MD. The gerontologist might suggest that she be checked in for a couple of days especially if she seems confused or dehydrated. After that she could move into a facility as a hospital admission (Medicare pays for several days after she leaves the hospital).
None of this is easy. I basically made my mom move from her home to IL a couple of years ago and just in Jan from IL to LTC. From the outside she seemed to be just fine - cooked, went to the store, bills, mail, bathed, got dressed,etc. But things were a mess - she would leave the gas on the stove - not her fault it was the dial;
wouldn't take her med's - they tasted funny and the pharmacy was trying to poision her; accused the neighbors of stealing her trash; filed complaints with the USPO that carrier was reading her mail; falls; 3 auto accidents in a year - teenagers made her drive her car into a pole; the list went on & on and it was always somebody is doing something to me. She didn't want to move and was some kinda upset, wringing her hands and crying while the movers were shrinkwrapping her furniture for the move to IL. But it had to be done for her safety and security. Last autumn, things got worse in that her episodes of paranoia happened about every couple of weeks so now she is in LTC.
She see's a gerontologist and this has been a godsend in that we've figured out that she has Lewy Body dementia - so she is on Exelon patch, and she is anxious rather than depressed, so Remeron works for her. Also with LBD they have this funny shuffle and for her it gets to be a balance issue so she goes to a balance class at the LTC. All of her meds are given to her regularly and with lots of water, so she is not having UTI's or getting dehydrated and confused.
Dementia does not get better. Taking action sooner is better. Good luck!
1) She sees a Doctor and is evaluated. 2) Move out of your home.
You may also consider getting some advice from and Eldercare Attorney as she has notified the Police of theft, accused you and your husband of taking things from her. You need to protect yourselves against false accusations caused by the dementia.
Good luck
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