My mom with Alzheimer’s now believes there is a man in her bed, she can't get him out and therefore sleeps in the chair. I have tried a few tactics - I have said he is gone, also tried telling her to kick him out, I have kicked him out. Any suggestions? She is not getting any sleep now. She also thinks the woman in the mirror does not like her (they used to be friends). Is this indicative of a further decline - is this “normal” for Alzheimer’s?
(P.S. Sounds like you are a good SIL, letting MIL live there and putting up with all this FUN!)
When she moves on to a different delusion, she may start using the bed again.
My grandmother had lots of hallucinations when she was having health challenges. Once her sodium levels were out of whack - probably from diet changes and type of blood pressure medication. Once, she was sick and kept imagining a hole in the floor. Once she and my mom came from Illinois to visit us in Colorado and she had oodles of hallucinations. It turns our that she wasn't oxygenating well (oxygen is much lower in the mountains and she has a bad heart) and a little oxygen tank was the "fix" for the remainder of the visit.
Mention this to her Dr.
My 96 yr old Dad has hallucinations. Sees things that aren't there but it only lasts a day and goes away.
Dit's your mom have a Cathiter? If so urinary tract infections " UTI's"
Can cause irrational behavior, hallucinations, ect.
Try Praying for and with your mom.
Let her know her Guardian Angel will be staying with her now and the man has left and she is now safe.
Change the mirror for a beautiful picture of your mom or yourself or just art of something your mom would like or a collage of lots of old pictures.
If you don't have a dog, perhaps you can foster one for awhile. (?) if you are a pet person.
Get her a stuffed teddy bear, and perhaps that may work.
Put a pretty poster or picture up against the mirror, as the forum has suggested.
Or lil party lights at night.
Play soft music that she likes. maybe she can close her eyes and listen to that. books on tape.
At least your mom still talks. I hope she gets a bit of rest and piece of mind.
There's really not much that can be done unless her delusions effect either of you negatively. Then check on the meds. She may also outgrow these symptoms.