My mother is getting worse every day. Do you think it's the Resperdol? Last night when I was getting getting ready to walk my dog, she went down the elevator (couldn't stop her) went to the concierge and said there was a fire on the 3rd floor (delusions). She was barefoot and in a short nightgownl. Thank goodness the concierge told her that "the fire was under control and not to worry." He must have had some dementia training. She sat down barefoot,, short nightgown, no shoes in the lobby while the concierge said he would keep an eye on her. I call the Alz hotline and they said maybe I should take her for a walk outside. I would have but it was 10 PM. I finally got her back in the apartment, helped her get ready for bed and gave her the Ambien prescribed. I was at peace. This morning about 6 AM I found her sitting up on the living couch sleeping. I helped her in the bedroom. Now she won't leave me alone, calling my name every five seconds. She is supposed to be assessed for the assisted living in Florida, but I am not sure if they will accept her. We were down in the gym on Friday (the HHA, my mother, and I. They were sitting on the stationary bike and my mother kept calling the HHA horrible names and made believe she was spitting at her. I thought my mother was a classy lady at one time, critical yes, but classy. It's becoming more then a nightmare, I would say a living hell. Her dentist said something horrible about her on Friday. I am ending the agency HHAs at the end of the month, since our lease is almost over, and the HHAs from the agency have no dementia training at all. I just don't know what to do. Just don't know. I am in tears. My two little dogs are even losing sleep and stresed out. My little one couldn't walk yesterday until I got her outside. My mother is going through hell and I can't take seeing her like this. I've been to memory centers, psychiatrists, neurologists and no one can say anything except get her into a nursing home. I have a brother and sister who never call her, don't want to be any part of her life. I promised her never a nursing home. Please help me, any suggestions.
She has been on Resperdol for about three weeks. Yes, the neurologist and psychiatrist told me about the devasting side effects of this drug, but they also told me that it will calm her down and prevent her from abusing me mentally and physically. She is now on her second one 0.25mg today and I turned on some music for her. Just read an article in the NY Times about a man who was riddled with AD and headphones were placed on him with his favorite music. He awakened, started speaking normally about the music that was on, started laughing and singing. I called the psychiatrist the other day to ask him if I could give her another Resperidol. She awakened me at 5 AM and kept knocking on my bedroom door every five minutes. . The doctors say I am under medicating her. I hope enviornmental changes will help, such as the assisted living place if she gets accepted. She has had memory loss for several years now and outbursts for about one year. I opted to move into a two bedroom two bath apartment with her (big mistake). thought the pool and gym downstairs would really help her. She talks about eating out and going to movies. I am so overwhelmingly exhausted that I can't think about going to a restaraunt with her, no less a movie. I lost my job because I had to keep running home due to outrage with her and another HHA.
I think that Resperdol worked, she's going to sleep for a while, I was just notified by her. I want a peaceful environment. I get upset at times and I know it is bad for her disease. But, I get mad at myself for saving her from a nursing home that my brother two years threatened and then I am happy she's not there. I'm up until 3 AM every night to do "my thing" after she sleeps.
Thank you so much for responding. I will talk to the psychiatrist on the 25th and I know what he will tell me. Nothing is going to help. She's tried a bunch of meds. I truly think activity and being around people will help. There were a few people in the elevator on Friday with wine glasses in hand, she was delightfully charming to them. Maybe it's me, maybe I am the cause of her decline. This is why I would like her to be in a beautiful assisted living. If only I could control her mind and make her act normal during the assessment.
I was reading parts of Elder Outrage and one thing that was said was the parent almost always uses the child or caregiver family member as the whipping board. My mother uses everyone, the HHA, the psychiatrist, the neurlogist, the NP.
My only suggestion to you is to take the pressure off yourself by wanting her to have a 'normal' life.... what is normal for her now is what she believes to be true and trying to convince her otherwise is insanity for you..... I do applaude you for educating yourself and seeing what options you have....I am not sure why children promise thier parents no nursing home when sometimes it is the only choice... and no, no one wants to be warehoused, and yes there are some bad ones out there, but with research and commitment on your part you may be able to find something nice that you can feel good about... I am not suggesting you put her in a NH, I'm simply saying to leave yourself that option if it becomes neccessary... and you can call her Dr. before the date you said and report your concerns... be proactive in her care... some of us are too exhausted to even question a Dr.... unfortanletly... there are NO meds for 'Alz/dementia, it will be the meds that are already available.... some can take these meds with no problems, some have horrible side effect... some will work for awhile, some work for a long time... one of our most frustrating things is the med issue... it's always a crap shoot... and our poor elders are the guinea pigs... sorry if that sounded so harsh, but this is one thing i stay frustrated about..... so be more proactive... you are doing a great job so far, beleive it or not.... so many things are going to be out of your control, so keep posting and letting us know how YOU are too.... caregivers get lost in the chaos of this disease and then we wonder why we are so exhausted.... let us know how you are.....hugs
My mom isn't able to get out of bed but she has a hard time sleeping at night. I hear her tossing and turning when I am on the computer in the next room. Benadryl doesn't do anything for her (it's the pm part of tylenol pm). I used to give her norco, a pain pill with a narcotic component, it no longer does anything. I did have Ambien for her but it stopped working and then her dementia got worse and she would be REALLY drowsy in the morning. I was told by her hospice doctor that it's not uncommon that the elderly have the opposite reaction to medications. If this medication is working then use it. But there are dangerous side effects. You may decide to keep using this because it gives you more quality time with her but make sure that you are ready to accept the negative side effects without guilt. Do what you would want your child to do in this case. And make your arrangements now for the time that your family will need to make decisions for you.
It is always possible that changed behavior is related to new drugs. Work closely with her physician on this.
I guess I really don't understand why you would be opposed to a skilled nursing facility if that is what is best for her. It may take a lot of work on your part to make sure the potential of being good for her is reached. But you are putting a lot of work in now, so I don't think there is any question that you could be a fine advocate for her, starting with carefully evaluating the centers available to you.
Your mother never envisioned that she would wind up in a nursing home. Do you think that she ever envisioned sitting barefoot in a short nightie in a lobby, waiting for a delusional fire to be controlled? Her current situation is not what she wanted, not what she expected, and definitely not within her control -- or yours.
Honor the spirit of your promise. Never abandon her. Never just "warehouse" her. Always do your utmost to see that she is well cared for. I hope you will use all resources available to you to see that she gets the best care.