I've received other advice concerning my 82 year old mother's wish for me to take her to London. Her health is not good, but if Dr. says she can go medically, I observe her and determine that both she and I could make the trip, then my question is this:
She has given POA to others, including medical. I'm not on good terms with POA but believe that he will honor her wishes.
What do we need to do to protect both of us?
Thanks...
Start by reading these websites which explain what is needed prior to and during travel with a cancer patient:
myvmc/lifestyles/travelling-with-cancer/
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2600098/
http://www.cancer.net/navigating-cancer-care/cancernet-feature-articles/traveling-cancer
It is also important to have a plan if your mother should die on the trip. Will you have her cremated and leave her remains in London? Will you have her buried there or will you repatriate her remains? It is important to plan what to do if the worst occurs so that, no matter what, you will know what to do without question and can follow the plan at a time where you may be in great emotional distress.
She isn't on Medicaid, so that wouldn't be an issue. I'm also going to empty every airline mile we've both accumulated over the many years and get us there in Business Class. I don't know how it could be done otherwise.
Also to your question - domestic location? I wish. No, London is in her blood. She's a complete Anglophile…..
It's getting a plan in place, as you mentioned, and the legal aspects I suspect I'll bring up AND complete while I'm there - else I won't do it. You're both right. And sure, there are others who could go with us, but it would be at my cost, and I'm not willing to do that. If I can't take care of her, I won't take her.
Will update after evaluations! Doctor/atty/POA, etc. I hope it goes well…..
I suppose it is possible for her to appoint you as POA before the trip, and return the responsibility to the current POA upon your return.
I once went on a cruise on a very small ship, with an alumni group. Two sisters were on the trip with their mother. We needed to return to our first port on the second day. The mother was very ill and needed to disembark. One daughter went with her. She died ashore. The daughter took care of details, mainly by calling a brother who was standing by, and then re-joined the cruise a few days later. The story was that at the time they bought the tickets Mother was in remission with cancer and wanted to take one last trip. They didn't realize how sick she had become again until they were on board.
I remember thinking at the time, "Boy, I sure hope that is how I get to go ... doing something I like doing, right up until the end." I heard that attitude expressed many times on the rest of the trip. I am not sure that the cruiseline felt the same way, but the passengers thought it was OK for the sisters to make this attempt for their mother.
I admired the fact that there was a contingency plan in place. Everyone (including a brother at home) knew what they would do if mother became very ill, and they had looked up what would have to happen with the body if she died.
When my husband developed dementia we continued to take cruises and to travel (with the encouragement of his neurologist). We traveled by plane, by Amtrak, and by car. But as the disease progressed we scaled back. Our last cruise was on Lake Michigan. (He did not want to be outside the US, for fear of not being able to donate his brain if he died abroad.) His daughter traveled with us -- I could have not done that last trip alone. That was in June; he died in November.
So I am enthusiastically in favor of travel for those very sick, AS LONG AS they can handle it and will genuinely get pleasure from it -- or at least have the potential for it. And AS LONG AS their companion is fully prepared for all the possibilities of things that could happen.
In your case, JAsDaughter, your mother wants to go to London. Awesome. But are there domestic locations she has also wanted to visit or revisit? Staying within the US simplifies some of the contingency plans. Niagara Falls? California wine country? Any of the national parks? New Orleans and bayou country? Mount Rushmore? I would want to take her somewhere, if I were you, but I think I'd try to scale back a bit if that would also give her pleasure.
A new member of my local support group just returned from a couple of weeks in Europe with her husband who has dementia. Four other adult relatives went with them. They had an awesome time, and it probably was their last chance to go abroad. But the wife was very, very glad for the support and help of the other adults. Is there anyone else who might travel with you and Mom?
Whatever you decide, I wish you and your mother the best.