I had P.O.A.& guardianship of my Dad and had him placed in a home which he needed.I changed his bank details to pay for his care but my sister cleaned out his account to pay Mum's debts. My sister then kidnapped( pretty much) my Dad from the nursing home (home did not ask for any paper work from her) and took him back to her house. She got a revoking order of my P.O.A. even though Dad didn't know what he signed.mEANWHILE my Mum is still in hospital after 5 months.My sister was using their pensions to pay Mum's debts. Now Dad can't see anyone as he is locked up in her 4 storey mansion. She is emailing and texting really nasty things ( even though I can't see what I have done wrong) and now says she is going to take her 4 siblings to court. Im at a loss at what to do. I have spoken to solicitors, police and doctor but no one can really help. Any thoughts or ideas would be appreciated. PS im in Australia
Welcome back.
As you describe this, it was not just a kidnapping. She took him straight to a lawyer. I share your amazement at the speed.
Given this situation, I stand with the others who say, "Walk away and forget it." Letting go is the hardest thing we have to do in life but it is so worth it. There is pain. But there is also the freshness of a new perspective and a new start. Consider that now your sister (in the mansion) is now responsible for the debts!
Don't waste any more time brooding about this. Let it go and focus on the positive things in your life.
a)Is your dad legally liable to pay your mother debt( you have not clarified)if not, then no one can touch his account for a wife in separation or not dependent (who was responsible for your mum ???)
b) you have sat doing nothing when you had a POA to protect your father , if POA is revoked now she is responsible though you can contest the POA stating your father condition but then your absence and silence is doubtful.POA can't be taken lightly
c) consult a lawyer is my sincere advice as siblings can play blame card easily
Not in every case it isn't especially as diseases progress and home carers haven't a real clue as to how to handle some issues or who are worn out past the point of no return
My brother is POA, and dumped my parents into a nursing home when I was willing to care for them myself. They were hosed down once a week, received no oral care, and my mom's medication got so screwed up that she could not function. She was never helped to eat or drink. And this was at the "best place in town."
The IF that was the case and I personally don't believe it for one moment you had a DUTY to report it simultaneously to your brother and to the authorities - if you didn't that YOU neglected her too.
I'd like to understand, because my parents now receive great private care at home, my mom weighs 130 pounds, and my entire family still hates me.
Private care in home in not a financially viable option for many - it isn't covered by most insurances where there is only one person in receipt of care but two people might make this viable.
Nursing home care STINKS!!! In the US, low-paid aides "care" for 10-15 people.
Nursing home care does NOT STINK in all cases and it is so very wrong of you to generalise. As with any care nome private care or nursing care or ALF care it HAS TO BE MONITORED to ensure it works for the person concerned. A lot of people thrive in a NH because they get to socialise with people of their own age
Many are as helpless as babies but weigh 100-200 pounds. It is impossible to receive quality care in these institutions. Wouldn't you rather live with your child in a mansion than be neglected in a crappy nursing home? If your mum's worst nightmare is going to a nursing home, do you think your dad wants to be in one? Do YOU hope to be in one? If your sister lives in a mansion she probably has the means to care for your dad. Why is it wrong for her pay THEIR bills with his pension? She's not using it for HER OWN bills. How do you expect their bills to be paid? And no one was "kidnapped." Unless your dad was declared legally incompetent in a court of law, he can live and do whatever he wants.
Firstly it is absolutely possible to receive good care in fact excellence in care is what most NH strive for ....and achieve for their staff are trained. I would rather live with people I saw and spoke to and could make friends with any day over living alone in a mansion isolated from everyone except the people who made me stay there. Its not just about being comfortable it is about social emotional physical spiritual well being too not forgetting financial well being
I am 53 and my daughter is my POA. She cannot tell me what to do, and there's no "magic date" when she can. POA allows you to manage money on the other person's behalf. NOT TO RUN THEIR LIFE. This is a huge misunderstanding.
Actually there is a magic date and that date is the date when a professional declares you to be incapable of making sound decisions and at that point your POA can pretty much run your life as long as they do so in your best interests. POA for finance allows you to manage their finances in their best interests BUT POA for health and well being means that the POA should be aware of the persons wishes and act as far as is appropriate within those guidelines
My guess is you are just trying to stir things up but just in case you are serious this is my explanation:
The nursing home was was really good, he had made friends and was thriving. No need to remove him
There is doubt thatt DAD wants to be holed up in a mansion without seeing any other relatives/people.
Thats social abuse a violation of safeguarding laws
Police didnt want to do anything as my father walked out on his own free will,
even though he would've walked out with a stranger if they knew his name.
THATS the inadequacy - a system that doesn't understand that HOME CARE IS NOT ALWAYS best
I think you reversed your opinion form the beginning to the end of your message. did you?
In any case, we really do have to stop generalizing.
Elders who might get short shrift in a nursing home, might also be battered with no one to see or report it in the private home of their children. Where are they better off?
Many people who "dump" their parents in AL or a NH live thousands of miles away but are keeping their parents near the rest of the family. For them, there is little alternative.
The bottom line is that each case and set of factors is different and needs its own solution. We don't help each other with sweeping generalizations..
and it never will