I have a resident that has dementia, is deaf and blind. Her daughter is very protective and is always complaining about the care her mom is given. We do a great job of giving her all her needs but it doesn't even seem to be enough. We have 22 dementia residents with 3 caregivers on a shift. We can't give everyone one on one care all the time but we try very hard. The resident is very on adge all the time and she scratches which makes herself bleed. She also gets up and roams around, we always have to stop what we are doing to go sit her down and it's frustrating. We have to do a checklist now of just her care. What are ways can I handle her demanding daughter?
I would encourage you and your coworkers to really self evaluate your care of this pt. If you are doing the best you can for her begin to look at ways to help the pts daughter. You might want to bring the daughter more into care planning for the pt, it might help the situation. You mention that the pt is always on edge maybe a talk with the daughter and the pts doc might help.
Dementia pts are some of the most difficult pts to deal with. Its hard on caregivers and it's incredibly hard on family. As a family member with a Mother who has dementia I can tell you there is grieving everyday for the loss of your parent. Everyday it seems there is a little less of the person you used to know. It is a long, slow process down dementia road and it takes a tremendous toll on family. I wish you the best of luck in your care of this pt and her family.
What kind of facility are you? The fact that she is always threatening to take her home makes me think that for some reason she thinks she can't?
With 22 residents and 3 aides, it would be difficult if not impossible to spend very much one-on-one time with anyone. I thought maybe she used a walker or cane or could hold onto the rails on the wall. Her blindness does present some extra difficulties for you to deal with. I just hate to think that someone who can walk 3 miles (I wish I still could) has to sit all the time waiting until someone can hold her hand.
Sometimes you just need to bide your time and hope that the daughter chills out after a while. You have 22 residents to care about, she has one mommy.
Nojoy3, you made some very good points.
Being abusive to staff is not acceptable. The facility director should speak to her about it.
You sound very caring and that you are doing a great job.
If so, part of the problems is likely the " level of expectation" of this residents family AND the owners of the facility. Board & care are very much less expensive than either AL or NH, which means less staffing and support services. I looked at a couple for my mom, but although she could "do" what was expected for ADL 's & be self-directed in medication at the Board & Care home, it was better for her to go into an IL which was part of a larger tiered facility that had AL & NH - so that if something happened there would be a higher level of trained professionals and services at the ready. Now mom never needed it, but was good to know could be.
Daughter is expecting Ritz Carlton for Quality Inn, she is never going to be happy. The whole list of what has to be done for mom is, her way of manipulating to get this. Not going to ever work as your place is just not set up for individualized care plans. Owners probably run on a tight profit margin, so want to keep all residents. Plus they are wary of daughter as it sound like she will threaten lawsuit or reporting to city, state, board of health. So a part of how they deal is to place the excessive caregiving on this 1 resident to the small staff of 3.
You need to let owners know how much time this 1 resident is taking up. Maybe you all - all the caregivers - do a log of time spent 24/7 for a week on the time demands of this 1 resident. Note ever item that daughter wants addressed too. Do all with exact time. With all this the owners can decide just what to do. With documentation, they can send the daughter a "30 day notice" that resident needs to move; that although they have loved having mom there, the level of care that the mom needs cannot be provided. Daughter will not be happy as the costs will go from maybe 2k to 8k, but she isnt going to be happy no matter what now is she.
Facility does not have to help find a new place for the lady either. That protection - I think - is only for SNF/NH on Medicare & Medicaid paying. They can however, attach a list of nearby ALF & NH.
Good luck in all this. You sound like a gem of a caregiver!