For all of you whose loved ones have been in a nursing home, was any kind of effort made to engage them once they reach a stage where they can no longer participate or make their wants and needs known? Could my mom's life be better there?
I struggle daily with my inability to provide any warmth or quality of life for my mother. I read and search for ideas to engage her, but 90% of the advice I find is aimed toward those with early to moderate memory loss and without the other profound physical disabilities she has – lack of vision, hearing loss, immobility, a profound inability to follow a conversation or story. We were never a touchy-feely kind of family so advice to include soothing touch – especially if her behaviour has me on edge and I am all stress and prickles – is just not in my nature. Music works for a while, but the majority of her day is spent sleeping or sitting or lying like a vegetable.
Another thing, once they reach my mother's level of disability everything I have read advises they are close to dying, but my mother is stable and has been essentially unchanged for years.
I had two choices, long-term-care facility, or to take Mom back to my parents house and bring in around the clock caregivers. My Dad was still living in their house, and I just couldn't have him see my Mom in that condition 24 hours a day.
Thus, long-term-care was my choice. Dad's caregivers [once Dad was alone I called in caregivers for him] would drive him to the facility at lunch time so he could feed Mom or have the caregiver do the feeding. After a half-hour or hour, Dad was ready to leave. Part of him wanted Mom to stand up, walk and be her self [she was 98], and part of him knew she would never be coming home.
Mom's nursing home was pretty nice. My Mom was only there 3 months and was on Hospice. Mom did like the fellow who was able to pick her up and put her into her geri-recliner... she would say "nice man". Mom was only 80 lbs but that would be like trying to pick up 80 lb weight at the gym.
Mom had a room-mate, even though she couldn't communicate with the person, the person did keep an eye on Mom. Mom was a climber, so when she fell trying to climb out of bed, the room-mate would buzz for the Staff.
I believe my mom is better at the nursing home. I just couldn't take care of her overwhelming needs and be a decent person at the same time. She was severely mentally ill all her life and was everything but a kind, loving, encouraging mother. In fact, she pretty much just went back and forth between locked in her room crying or outside her room raging at all of us for some delusional something we did against her. So, yeah, soothing touch is not going to be my thing at all.
It's a horrible, horrible disease and takes its nasty toll on everyone in the family. I just know for me, and it sounds like for you as well, the nursing home is the best choice. It's the best way of providing care when someone is as disabled as your mother sounds to be.
Not that you mention feeling "guilt," but I know I sometimes feel like I was less than "good" for putting her in a nursing home. Sometimes I think the feeling we call guilt is really just our humanity coming through--a feeling that makes us sad that another human being has to live this way. Our humanity makes us feel sad about it, but there's no reason to label that feeling "guilt" because we did not cause it and we cannot control it. We just do the best we can, and nursing home or long-term care centers are the best answer to that for everyone in the family once a patient gets to late-stage Alzheimer's or dementia.
I haven't seen the unit she will probably end up in, but my sister (who works at the front desk there) says there are less patients there and more aides who do one-on-one, so I'm hopeful she'll get plenty of attention when that time comes. They tell me she actually behaves pretty well and is easy to deal with, thank God. I go home feeling okay and will sure continue to go out there often. But much as I feel relieved about mom overall, I still find myself praying God will take her soon and that she won't linger for years.
YOu said you aren't touchy feely. Thats okay, maybe draw her a pretty picture or make her a nice card/poster she can enjoy (if only for a moment); treat her to an ice cream or small box of candy. Bring her a McD happy meal; bring her a flower. Place a birdfeeder outside her window. It doesn't have to be much.
My mom is still at home. I have finally come to realize that we only have snippets of meaningful conversation, a meal, and the shorter the visit the more pleasant she is. SHe is overwhelmed with trying to keep up if my visits are longer than a couple hours I've come to realize. Sad; but I go with it. Above are the couple things I do that bring her joy -- even if she forgets about them an hour later.
You will become a daughter again, not a caregiver first, daughter second.
You will help reflect an attitude that she will pick up on.
One of the nice things is there are more people around in a Memory Care unit or Nursing Home so he will always have someone around that will offer a smile, a gentle touch on the shoulder, a kind word. Even if they are busy just a smile is better than a tired sigh.
While everyone wants to remain at home with family and be cared for I am sure we would all agree that we would not want our loved ones to be going through what we are going through caring for someone. So the simple answer is would you want your son, daughter, spouse to be doing for you want you are doing for someone else? I am betting the answer is a resounding NO.
And as a side note it sounds like your Mom may be final stages and in reality a move like this might cause a significant decline so much so that she may not last long.
In the MC they still attempt to engage those who are nonverbal in conversation and some they will put into their geri-chair and they go into the activity room to be in the presence of the activity. I think that with your mom having vision and hearing loss makes things more difficult. I would try to engage the opinion of an expert. Maybe, someone will pop up on an online forum. Or maybe, speak with the director of the LTC facility. I think that having all of those losses makes her situation quite challenging.
As for prickly and tense: mthr was an abuser. I cannot give loving touch to her because of our history. The staff has no such baggage, and they are super at pats, rubs, and other lovey touch things that she never showed me. This makes a home an even better option.
I've always advised others on the site to consider the social aspects of being in a facility - whether it is AL, MC or a nursing home - as I really do feel that can be so important. I realized too late that my mom should have moved out of her home instead of wasting away there for years after she lost her vision and couldn't drive anymore. I'm afraid it's too late for her now.
So far I can still handle her physical care, although I know the time may come when I can not.
I'm pretty sure visits would consist of me prattling something inane for about 5 minutes before I would run out of steam while she sits/lies there almost totally unresponsive, so "getting to be her daughter again" is a nice thought but unrealistic. I guess I'm afraid she would soon forget me altogether and I would soon lose the little connection we still have.
As for her being close to the end of life... who knows? She was placed at 40% on the palliative performance scale when we enrolled her in palliative care in 2013, may be at 30% now. She's already beaten the odds and I haven't seen any significant change in a very long time.
The main thing is that it is not likely to make an enormous difference to your mother either way. Whereas, more importantly, it might make an enormous difference to you. So taking all things being equal as regards your mother's welfare, the next thing to consider is the costs and benefits to you of the option.
I know you know exactly the points to weigh up, so I won't list them. I just thought it worth pointing out that, once your mother's welfare is assured, letting *your* wellbeing tip the balance of the decision is a perfectly legitimate approach.
that quality of life issue... i thought aloud [mumbled softly] just yesterday at drs office the word 'existing' don't remember the context, but said as an evaluation of her days, being just that, existing, and not liv-ING.
but is it MY vision? perhaps not hers? she may be in that place that has me so befuddled: expressing how healthy she is [physically, not too bad!] and mentally [early-to-mid stage? dementia - geri appt in april - lonnng wait - any wonder why? ha!] ...and not realizing that there is sooooo much to experience and she is just taking up space [harsh, but just a way of describing]
we all read/see how many different scenarios others are experiencing with their moms [mostly moms, right?] - our relationships growing up with them - - observing their personalities [faults] more intellectually as we mature...affects how we interact now. how much is their personality, how much the disease...
the rollercoaster of anger and frustration, then guilt, feeling sad is not a fun ride.
It's that whole "unknown" factor that screws up logical thinking... I can surely carry on for another few months, but the thought of another few years is terrifying.
To use when you're trying to identify that logical cut off point, I mean. You put in x worth of CareWork, with all that that entails, and your loved one gets out y worth of QALYs -
Aside: when I first came across the acronym QALY it was in a searing political satire and I thought the author had made it up. But oh no. The Quality Adjusted Life Year is indeed a unit in current use by health and social care policy decision makers assessing cost effectiveness of provision. Well, I suppose they've got to allocate resources somehow; but chilling, no?
To resume. At some point the x:y ratio is going to become, to use the technical term, COMPLETELY BONKERS. It will make no sense for you to turn yourself into a wrung-out dishrag solely in the (possibly vain) pursuit of a hypothetical, undetectable 0.001 QALY.
But as you know, the real difficulty is that the cut off point keeps moving. E.g...
It's only a few more months.
She's actually much easier to manage now that she's immobile so not a falls risk.
The rehab centre wasn't transferring her, I couldn't leave her there.
I've come this far, I want to see it through...
I think all you can promise yourself (and your friends here!) is that you will keep revisiting that decision. Hugs.
Oh, and the fact that I am tied to the house of course.
I'm sorry. This limbo is really hard to bear.
At NH she has 10+ activities a week [art, beading etc.] plus religious services - I could never be able to do that much - she is a participator so that is easy
My dad [94] is in another facility [weird thing is they have same legal name & advice is not to play Russian roullette with accidental med switch] but he is mentally all with it - he needs the physical help I can't do unless we did a 3 month renovation [moving walls etc.] to our only full bathroom - he does not participate much but the PSWs just love interacting with him - within 48 hours of getting there after 3 months in hospital the difference was amazing - he has his meals, laundry etc done for him but rest of time he writes letters, plays on computer etc very much like he did in the retirement home but with so much extra help for physical needs
I do not regret having them there as otherwise some issues would be slipped by - ie mom is getting over pneumonia right now but when you have an elderly parent at home ... how often are vitals taken [BP, heart etc] & that is where the difference is - professionals are doing charting daily & they knew to have mom get an xray [onsite] after hearing some chest sounds otherwise I would have put her cough down to her regular winter cough
Don't rush to do this but when the time comes don't feel guilty about it either - did you become the teacher your dad wanted you to be? or the hair dresser your mom wanted you to be? - no you followed your own path on your career .... so to you may want to be 'super daughter' but you can't & quite frankly nobody can - we can only do as much as we are able & wisdom is knowing when you need more help - so say HELP when the time is right