My brother is a doctor. He lost his license for 3 yrs. due to unethical actions while my Dad was dying. He is now a danger to my mom. What options do I have to help her? She has dementia and worships my brother. He and she hid my father's very legally drawn up Advanced Directive. My father suffered horribly for over 8 months and had requested no intubation. He had a DNR. My brother intubated him behind my back. I would have stopped it. My brother broke AMA Ethic 8.19 which forbids a doctor making decisions for or treating a family member except in an emergency. As I watched the poor decisions being made by my brother, was asked to stop him by his hospital, and was told an ethics committee was being formed, I understood why such an ethics violation is a felony in Georgia. In the end, the hospital located Dad's advanced directive. My father was mentally capable and assigned the health POA role to me. I was alone when he died. Now my mother is still struggling with a TBI that resulted when an umbrella pierced her neck and almost ripped off her head while she was on a windy beach 7 years ago. She is not taking care of herself, her house is dirty, she will not allow me to help because "i allowed my father to die" , and she is being treated by my brother for medical issues. The treatment is not appropriate. She fell recently, hit her head, appeared to have a broken arm, had sore ribs, and started with dizziness. He and she refused to obtain medical help. I would have. She has rages that are dangerous. My brother hates me because he blames me for the loss of his license. I am a retired special needs teacher after 35 years of working with students of normal intelligence who were very sick children. I could and did take care of many of my father's more simple medical needs. My mother does not like illness and would barely touch him after 63 years of marriage. My older sister died of an alcohol related illness three years ago.. Our small town is supportive of me, mother has gone against everything my father requested regarding family property and houses. I now have COPD due to constant pneumonia, I never smoked , and I have an immune disorder.I am disabled by the standards of the Social Security Office. I miss teaching. I was planning to teach until I was 65. I am 60. Each day is worse. Should I just give up, should I report this to elder care abuse, or does someone have a kinder suggestion? My father warned me it might be like this but asked me to take care of my mother. My mother's rages frighten me. She has a gun.
From your desciption, I am not sure his judgement is even good enough to be her caregiver or to manage his own affairs. Yes, I'm hinting that maybe he has at least mild cognitive impairment himself...he won't be jalied then.
That said, he and your mom can both be fully expected to have a really hard time with giving up control even though they are clearly making a muck of things. You probably need to have Mom get a serious, comprehensive, eldercare legal evaluation. YOU didn't fail your father. Your brother, when you and he both thought he could and was functioning as a physician, made bad medical decisions, maybe in good faith, and I don't see how you could have overridden them other than exactly as you did, making sure your father's health care directive was found and followed. Just my $0.02. And, I'm glad you have friends.
The other thing is to walk away and let the chips fall where they may. Do not put your name on anything that may make you responsible for anything financial.
Have you received any councliing for these issues or at least have a trusted friend or relative you can confide in. Do you think your brother is exploiting your mother financially? Is that why he is keeping such firm control. As vstefans suggested go to Dad's lawyer and seek his advice. At the moment you are just tying yourself to a runaway horse. Jump off.
back into Mother's life. She has told me she resents taking care of my brother. It is just sad. Thank you !
1. Let your mom and your brother have each other. That's what they want. They made stupid headstrong decisions that cost your father his life, ruining the last few months of it, and they blame you and don't want you involved.
2. It is not about kindness any more. If you see your mom as a true victim, OR you see yourself as being blamed for her deterioration, then a report to Adult Protective Services should be made. I don't know what you would lose by reporting. If they realize that you called in the report, they will go on hating you irrationally. If APS sees the situation as dangerous, they may take steps to change things, or supervise them being cleaned up. And if they then shut you out even more thoroughly than they have, at least you have tried and are not responsible for whatever happens next.
Whatever does happen next, focus on taking care of yourself and your own pulmonary condition and get the best treatment possible. Don't be exposed to filth, fumes, etc.
And - would you be at liberty to explain exactly what your brother actualy did? Did he prescribe narcotics and appropriate them for himself or to sell? What is he doing for an income without his license - you know, most of us docs simply are not good for anything else besides practicing medicine. If he is a criminal and ends up in jail or prison or more optimistically in rehab, and your mom then needs guardianship and facilitly care, that's a better outcome than you are looking at with things as they are.
Unless a home is declared a public health hazard the law is not going to step in. Rages are scary but they don't automatically translate into violence. You believe your Mom broke her arm when she fell but do you know that or are you speculating? Is it possible you are feeling powerless and things are becoming exaggerated in your mind? I ask because I struggle with that.
Each person in a family is going to have a different idea of how to do things for their elders. Your brother obviously wanted to keep your Dad alive despite the DNR. He went against your Dads wishes and broke the law. That was a desperate and emotional choice on his part and he paid dearly for making it.
The situation with your Mom is different. She supports your brother as her caregiver. I know how hard it is to have a sibling swoop in and take over the handling of elderly parents. And I know how doubly hard it is when you don't agree with the choices they are making. When that happened to me it was suggested by a few people here that I let go and focus on how I might be of service to my parents, on my own terms. This advice has allowed me to see through my emotions and better accept the situation. Someone else asked me if proving I was right was worth what I might be destroying. I'm not saying you are doing that but it is worth thinking about.
I wish you the very best in this difficult time.
Maybe an attorney who specialized in settling an issue amicably can be of assistance to you.
You seem to be next in line (with your disability) for brother's medical care. First Dad, now Mom, then you? Does that scare you?
Can your Mom stay alone? Four days a week brother visits? Where are you? This is more about the house than you know. Escape with your sanity, visit if you can.
Because these two people lie, your involvement in any of this will cause you great harm.
Do what Garden Artist suggested, call APS, but on your way out the door.
If you stay, you will need a witness, so rent out a room or two. You will need to be very strong, are you up for this?
I live in a suburb. Cars are a tool. We all need them. But that didn't mean my husband with dementia should be allowed to drive.
That is just common sense.
on a farm reason enough to let that combination continue - unless that is, you're afraid mom is going to be assaulted by a cow. If it's the rural isolation that's justifying the gun - mom must be in her 80's, right? What are the odds mom will be able to effectively aim and shoot an intruder? More likely the electric company meter man is gonna end up shot one day. Go to the local sherif and explain your mothers mental instability and having a gun in her possession. The sherif may or may not be able to get mom to turn over the gun - but most likely they'll pay mom a visit and at a minimum you'll have another set of eyes on her living conditions, should you need to gain guardianship.
It would be an easy decision to put Mom's welfare over that of the brother's. If you don't, you'll regret it. I get the impression from your posts that brother has more problems than are mentioned.
I'd call APS; at least see what they can do. But do it anonymously, although your brother will probably suspect you of it. That may in fact bring out unacceptable behavior on his part that convinces APS to act.
Your father was on Hospice; no one is to blame for his death.
Your brother does not deserve further punishment. He is probably also taking a beating from your mother. Let that go, too.
Since your brother is not caring for your mother the way you think he should be call and file a complaint with elder care services. Will you be able to take over your mother's care?