so my mom has recently been in a different nursing home, She has major mental issues and tried to end her life last night. Not the first attempt by any means, and it won't be the last. We are on the fourth place now in a year, and well I have no idea when and where I will put her next, I cant afford any place and well her actions have gotten her in the place that she is in. I cant reason with her and well no one wants to help because she is abusive, the hosp even turned her away said no we dont want her because of pass years of issues. So now what is there anyone that has gone through this, I am at my end of the rope I cant do this its been years of this
Where exactly is your mother at the moment? And what are your circumstances - are you living alone or with other people, are you working, what else is going on in your life?
I really can imagine how heart-sinking it is to have a parent nobody wants to take in. But remember: your mother may be a very difficult person to look after, she may have very complex needs, BUT SHE IS NOT THE ONLY ONE and I really doubt if she's the worst. After all, just for example, there are big strong men in late middle age whose dementia makes them violent - but one way or another their families get through. It may not be pretty, but there will be a way.
Also remember that you are not responsible for your mother's behaviour. She's your mother, not your child. If other people push her away because she's abusive, remember that you too are a the victim of her abuse, you're not the perpetrator. If you're prepared to help her in spite of her behaviour, so will others be.
There will be a way. Keep asking until someone helps you find it. Can you tell us a little more about what kind of conditions your mother has been diagnosed with? What kind of care she needs?
Please keep us posted. Keeping you in my prayers.
I salute you for your devotion for and care of your mother. I wish you...peace.
Long term after the evaluation, you should insist on a placement for her. In this case, you don't want her in your home if she presents a danger to others. The evaluation should reveal the likelihood of her harming herself or others in the future.
Take care.
So, all that being said, you as her caring child are in a very difficult spot. She would have to be committed by the courts as unable to keep herself safe. This currently is very difficult due to lack of housing resources and that the law currently favors individual rights.
Find yourself a counselor, as this will be a long and frightening process. See if you can get her evaluated by Aging and Disabled services who might have placement for her based on finding her in need, which may not happen. See if you can get her connected to a mental health provider who can medicate her for Parkinson, which she might be willing to do, and secondary but maybe more importantly the mental health issues. Some meds conveniently overlap.
The next part is the hard part. She may not remain in treatment or housing. Check with Adult protective services, let them know about the treatment failure of several prior settings. They might be able to appoint a legal guardian for her. Notice in most of this I used the word "might", and for good reason. It also might not work, but do keep letting them know with each episode, have them make a record. The cumulative record might (yep, that word again) make a difference down the road.
Do get some professional help for yourself. I could not manage what you are dealing with, few people could on their own.
We had trouble when Mom lived with us 6 years; I'd known she had 'special' problems all her life, undiagnosed, she simply 'got by'--rather amazingly, sometimes. But her behaviors never allowed her to have sustained good times, very often...depression, hyped-up for projects never finished, running off for days at a time leaving kids alone, at least one official suicide attempt prior to a sibling's wedding, hints at multiple personalities---it's been a crazy train ride.
Here, she kept escalating, to the point of getting physically violent sometimes, making threats [some she made good on], and creating chaos, not just for us, but in her surroundings. It was finally threatening both my partner's and my health; our son moved out never to return for even a visit.
We were told by multiple Social Workers, there was basically no recourse for getting help, told that nursing homes that knew of Mom's behaviors would never allow her to be placed in those, and, if there was a problem, pretty much there was NO protections for Caregivers.
One Social Worker said "You could call APS, but they would only investigate YOU for abusing your elder, which would follow you forever, making other problems". [[I was almost desperate enough to do that]]
After much calling, including contacting the Suicide Prevention Hotline in one episode of extremis, I learned:
==there's no protections for caregivers;
==call 911 to file a formal reports, which starts a file on the person;
==call 911 to request 'wellness-checks' if the elder is living in their own home, or even in yours or a facility;
==call your local Area Agency on Aging to learn what resources or solutions they might suggest;
==call for a Social Worker come to the house to do a 'formal, in-home evaluation' of your elder's situation if they live at home--any home [[we did--basically useless, but good to go through the hoops--Mom was able to hold out showing basically within normal limits for the 2 hrs they were here--then blew her gaskets AFTER they left! Also, The Workers kept asking Mom if she wanted to move out of here to somewhere more appropriate--she said no. They also asked if they could see her room--she refused; and, they let her get away with returning to her room to gather her wits, a few times during the interview--which prevented her showing deficits--she'd return to the interview refreshed.]];
==write a letter to her Doc, using one-liner fact statements, of her behaviors, for her file [[we did this: it resulted in her getting caught-out at 'drug-seeking', which then was on-file--it was otherwise very hard for officials to 'catch-her-out'--so that was one little 'win' at getting some evaluation remark on file]]
==IF elder is hospitalized for an acute medical issue, tell them to please do a Psych evaluation. This will usually fail, unless the elder is flagrantly exhibiting behaviors--mine was cool--able to be a show-timer to the hilt, but it was in her files that it was asked for. The hospital psych eval was very short, but because I'd told them of her [old] suicide attempt, and that she'd threatened more lately, they put a sitter in her room;
==when the person is currently IN a facility of any kind, that facility is legally responsible for that patient--either must figure how to deal with the elder, or find a new place for the elder--they will try hard to force family, even a friend, to take the person home with them, even for a visit---it's a game of 'hot-potato'. IF family tells the facility "It's unsafe for her to be here anymore, she is a danger to herself and to us, and we have other issues to deal with that preclude her returning to our home, EVER."
In your instance, she's already in a facility--they may not like it, may lack adequate staff to properly care for her--they MUST find her a proper facility, since she is a danger to herself and/or others.
They are NOT allowed to force family, nor friends, to take her home.
A psychiatrist needs to evaluate her to learn if some medications might be helpful, and prescribe them. That could help staff in facilities, if her mental health issues are under better control.
You can work with them, let them know you are concerned, but that due to your own health issues, and for your Mom's own safety, she needs some level of hospitalization, that you cannot in any way provide.
We got lucky, in a very painfully ugly way, that Mom was so terrified of being placed in some facility, even a nice assisted living or even in her own apartment, that she managed to slowly orchestrate and carry out plans to MAKE other family take her in, then cut us off from family using them. She hasn't spoken a coherent word to me in over 2 years; her anger and delusions can be epic.
It could end up similar for you.
PLEASE avoid feeling guilty for not taking your mom into your home!
FIRST, you must be your own best advocate.
NEXT, you must be your immediate family's best advocate [kids, partner].
AFTER that, you honor your Mom best by getting proper care for her---that is NOT necessarily in one's own home.
Honoring your parents includes placing them in housing or facility that can care for her, to prevent her harming herself or others. You may be running out of nursing homes--have you checked what mental hospitals are anywhere in your region? That may be her best choice.
You are not alone--plenty people with mental issues, behavioral issues are falling through cracks between systems, since most long-term mental hospitals got closed during Reagan's admin.
I truly hope you can find help--keep calling various offices--including Social Work, Welfare, the closest hospitals' mental health department, whatever mental hospitals might exists, her Doc, her Psychiatrist?
Keep trying!
Keep asking, and keep records of her behaviors.
Keep us posted!
PTs with meds and standard pay treatments, if judged useful. I find it funny no professional never made a suggestion what to do.
Seek out a elder pay. Contact your state medical school and ask for assistance in locating one. Also, if Medicare/Medicaid is paying, you may appeal to give you a few days to get your ducks in a row.
Good luck
Sorry, hyperactive auto correct
First of all YOU have not failed. The system may have failed, the NH may have failed, your mother may have failed, but you have NOT failed. You have done and are doing everything a loving daughter could do - and more. Again some of our others have passed on the message to us that we have never done enough or well enough. Try to realise that is a lie, and let the guilt go. There are some suggestions above how to get help for your mother.
I am concerned for you -where do you go? You need to protect yourself and your family. A few people here have turned their parent over to the care of the state as they could no longer do it.
It is not your fault that your mother is in this condition, you did not cause it, and only the professionals can provide solutions.
Put yourself and your children first. Tell the sw, the APS, her doctor, your doctor etc - that you cannot do this any more. It is too much for you, You are done caregiving for years and need a break. Let them take over. You need time to heal and take care of you and your kids. ((((((((((hugs))))))))))) and keep in touch
I'm so sorry for what you're going through. My mom wasn't suicidal, but she was psychotic and was in and out of many facilities. Like your mom, most of those places washed their hands of her in the end. You will get through this, I only wish I could say that it was easy. It isn't, and you already know that. I'm wishing you and your mom a good outcome. Don't give up.