We have been trying to get medication to reduce his anxiety but doctor reluctant to increase dosage. He is 88 with many health issues. From the minute he wakes up he starts phone calls demanding to go home. He makes nasty threats. He phoned police yesterday demanding they take him home. We get over 20 calls a day. Talking on phone or through window is not working. We can’t figure out if it is his hearing aid (batteries have been replace often) or he doesn’t understand. Or doesn’t want to understand. We have sent him letters and emails.
We have been trying to figure out how to safely look after him if he returns to his house. The stress is over the top for everyone. Any thoughts........?
When was his last needs assessment? His dementia could have advanced to the stage that AL is no longer the best care.
I would not take him home.
I would request a new needs assessment by someone besides the facility that wants him gone.
I would tell him that he has to stay right where he is until (fill in with whatever will get his attention).
It is so difficult when they are basically being held prisoner in their rooms right now. I would want to leave if my only space was a small apartment or room and nothing else. So be patient with that, it is understandable.
I would be angry at the facility for wanting to implement more change in his upside down world. With this lockdown they should have expected behavioral problems and been ready and able to cope. It is probably time to look for a better facility that actually has the ability to take care of their residents. This place obviously just wants to be an expensive warehouse.
His Dr. may be worried of increasing his fall risk if he increases anxiety meds. Ask the Dr. what else he knows of that can be done to help him so he's more comfortable and not causing trouble for the workers, staff, others (you!).
Ask the retirement home people in charge and workers for their professional opinions how to help him because you like it and the people there, you'd like for him to stay there, and he has nowhere else to go. You want to work with them as much as possible so he's not asked to leave, and it sounds like they're at the point already. Hopefully, you can turn it around quickly. With this corona, all are on their last nerve.
Don't take all his calls; limit those to maybe 3/day. Try redirecting him to eat, nap, watch tv. Tell him of a show on tv to watch. Talk about anything other than home, leaving; positive things. If there are any activities that are still being done on a limited basis during corona, are there some that he might get involved in? (ask workers) Would workers take him for a walk around the building, inside or out? Take him his favorite things to eat..snacks, fruit, ice cream, drinks so he might get more comfortable.
You may need to get him a phone for the hearing impaired. If you do, you might want to make sure it's for the visually impaired, too, and dementia (pictures on big buttons to press button & dial person).
With this much agitation, he may need to have his medication adjusted. This is done a lot by doctors who regularly treat dementia patients. Or a geriatric psychiatrist. Hopefully, they can find something that helps, but, I'd also keep in mind that sometimes, people who suffer with dementia are not content and they may stay that way until they enter another stage of the illness. I'd consider that he may not be repeatedly calling you due to insistence, but, due to the fact that he is forgetting. He forgets that he's already called you 10 times, so, he does it again.
I'd keep in mind that even if you bring him home, he may continue to insist on going home. He may try to leave his own home and behave in ways that make it just as intolerable there as the retirement home. His understanding is not likely to change and you may be no more able to appease him than the staff where he is. Plus, he'll need 24/7 supervision and that's not easy to do if he is resistant to care in his own home.
Do you want to share what medication? Even though we cannot diagnose or prescribe, many caregivers are aware that some meds can cause the opposite behaviors than the desired help needed to calm your Dad down. If that would be helpful to you.
Trust that there is a definite unmet need in your loved one, and it is stressful that he is suffering. And that you are suffering too.
When my neighbor went through this, he even called us all through the night! We could not take his calls, and turned off the phone. Turns out, after calling his doctor's office for help, and the doctor refused to test for an UTI (his staff knew nothing of the elderly symptoms of having a bladder infection, going only by their 'protocol'), this man did have a UTI.
How then did we find out? He was transported to the E.R. and tested. He had a UTI, and the behavior stopped soon after treatment. Be sure that it is not just a dipstick but a complete urinalysis with culture and sensitivity.
An elderly with a UTI can quickly deteriorate into sepsis and die.
The hallmark presenting symptom is behaviors! No fever, no burning on urinating, or the usual symptoms.
I would not be surprised that if someday the medical profession adds this to their list of UTI symptoms in the elderly: The patient is driving everyone else c r a z y!
My mom was kicked out, she was a danger to herself and others. She was moved from MC to a much smaller care home, ten residents instead of 25, more individualized care, better care and it was cheaper.
The facility my mom went to after being kicked out was entirely residents that had been kicked out of other facilities.
I will tell you that two facilities told me before we got her and my father into independent living (dad was great mentally) was that there will be a day when no facility will take my mother. I would be sure that if you take dad out that you are sure you are ready to have no one take him in the future.
All I can say is that it is a terrible disease of the mind.
Good luck to you.
Marie
when my mother first went to facility, she wanted to be there for first 2 hours. Then she did not get her way and started calling us non stop. And texting too. “Get me out, get me out, get me out”. We did not go see her at facility recommendation. She did this for two weeks. She started one morning calling my sister at work literally every 5 minutes. My sister is the nice one. She did finally stop but it was awful while it was happening.
He needs medication to calm him down. And you probably need to find a memory care facility who can deal with his behavior. 24 hour care at home is extremely expensive. It can be hard to find consistent staff and if there is one person, how do they control him if he takes off.
1. Get him the phone with video and text. We did, but it did not help as mom refused to look at the screen or read the words. Still, it might help dad.
2. Buy a cell and program it with only your # and all other relevant relatives. That way, no 911 calls.
3. Give him a dead table top phone. We did and mom had imaginary conversations all she wanted.
4. Remove phone and any phone privileges. The facility can call you if an emergency.
Don’t bring him home.
lit never stops.
Home would be GREAT if that's where he wants to be IF IF IF you have all of the bases covered before arriving at that decision. How is 24 hour care going to be handled. Do NOT bring him home with a few family members saying they will work out a rotating plan to sit with him because it will (1) never happen or (2) excuses will start rolling in about the assigned days. When some figure out they can't do the personal jobs that have to be done - you'll be left with the one person who does it out of love, guilt, whatever reason it is. Then you'll be right back to where you are now and fighting to move him BACK into some kind of facility. And, most important, you will be killing that one person who won't say no.
If he has $$ to pay for 24 hour care, then by all means use it until it runs out. Get your best person in the family to interview and choose the hired help because you are going to be searching for some thick skinned people with experience in dealing with bad attitudes. Not all so-called hired caregivers are willing to take verbal abuse even though they know it's not always a clear head dishing it out. You also have to be prepared to do last minute coverage because paid employees do call in sick, do have personal emergencies, and do quit without notice. Once again, no family volunteers, you have no plan.
If 24 hr care is not possible - find a geriatric doctor who better understands elderly and their issues and get advice on proper facility placement. ALWAYS ask for urine test when personality changes - meaner, sees things or talks about things that didn't happen, etc. UTI can change a person overnight and can be treated. If there was recent medicine change along w/personality change - ask the pharmacist or look up the drug for side effects.
1) testing for UTI
2) assessing current medications
3) remove or disconnect phone
4) consider MC
1) As many noted, UTIs in elderly, esp those with dementia, can present in odd ways. Generally if a behavior is a sudden onset, test for it. The test isn't hard, expensive or invasive, but it can rule out the UTI (get a full urine test, not just the dip stick.) I was a skeptic until it happened to my mother. First one resulted in severe afternoon/early evening sun-downing. The last 3 have presented as night time bed-wetting - soaking everything! Once treated, both issues resolved.
2) Elder's needs for medication can change over time. Not long ago the doc removed one of mom's BP meds, something she's been taking for a really long time! Have all his meds reviewed and have him reassessed. Some may be causing some of his issues.
3) Removing the phone might contribute to more anxiety, so perhaps just disable the service, at least until the underlying issue is resolved? I don't believe there is any way to eliminate the ability to dial 911 - even a cell phone with no plan can make this call. I purposely didn't give my mother a phone - even if she could make the calls, they wouldn't be to chit chat, they would just be nuisance calls and with her hearing she wouldn't understand anything!
4) Do consider MC. Your profile says AL, and if it is strictly AL, they are NOT equipped to deal with cognitive issues. Early stages might be okay, but as it progresses, they are not set up to manage dementia. AL is mainly for people who need physical assistance, although they can start there if in the very early stages.
Your reply indicates he's only been there 3 months, and initially seemed to be fine, engaging in social activity, making friends, etc. If everything medical is ruled out, it could just be the restrictions in place. It's enough to make "normal" people loony (or worse!), and in his case he probably doesn't understand why he is locked down.
Mom's facility is IL/AL/MC. The IL and AL have pretty much been restricted to stay in (they can sit/walk just outside, but no off-campus activities other than necessary medical treatment is allowed) and that includes staying in their own rooms. For the MC unit, it really isn't possible to keep the residents in their room, so they are allowed freedom of movement within the unit or into the enclosed garden area, weather permitting. All outside activity brought in previously has stopped, and mealtimes are staggered to allow more space between residents, but otherwise they are free to move about.
Given that he was adjusting and is now probably restricted to his room, this could be contributing to his anxiety and need to get out. So, again, rule out anything medical. If it is just the restrictions, given all his other issues I would consider finding a MC place for him. He already has dementia and it will progress, so now may be the best time to move him. If his current facility doesn't have that option, start searching for one that has openings and that can take in a new resident. In the meanwhile, after medical issues ruled out, notify the facility that you are seeking another location (not home!!!) and request they give you time to find a place. Obviously they are aware of what's going on outside the facility and know this will be a challenge, they should be willing to cut some slack.
If not, ombudsman? EC atty? Get someone on your side to help protect your dad!
At least the staff is up front with you.
I had a loved one who was in a skilled nursing facility, and developed a stage 4 bedsore. The staff told me NOTHING until one night I, walked into her room, while she was being prepped for bed and saw the ulcer. I took her to the nearest hospital. The ulcer could not heal, and she passed away a few months later.
Be thankful that the staff is communicating. Also, in this age of COVID19, there are reports of SNF's not even telling relatives that their fathers/mothers, etc. have contracted COVID19.!!!
UTI's in the elderly don't show the same symptoms as young people get. Frequently UTIs show as behavioral symptoms, even leading to delirium in the elderly. I always recommend a test to rule out other things, and an antibiotic can be given for the UTI.
1. Sounds like you need to consider your options, both moving him back home or making alternative arrangements. It is a financial and emotional/psychological consideration for you.
2. He is confused and frightened. Will he be / feel / be aware of being 'home' or elsewhere to feel less anxiety and fear?
3. In the interim, can he get more meds to deal with the anxiety?
4. Be careful - be aware of managing your own anxiety and emotional, physical, and psychological needs. Wearing yourself out will not help him.
My friend just last week lasted 2-3 nights in Skilled Nursing Rehab. He called me after there an hour BEGGING me to pick him up; after two days, he was ready to run out the door. The screaming throughout the night [of others], the 'bad' food, the lumpy bed, the nothing to do for 10 hours after 30 minutes of PT. He couldn't handle it. And, this was just a few days.
Your heart will tell you what you need to do. Gena.