I have so many things to ask/comment on. One being that I actually called a "caregiver" hotline last week and just sobbed. Kind lady was helpful, but it's all the same stuff.
Anyway, today's big question I hope you dears can help with is that my Mom has decided she wants a knee replacement. She had one years ago, and the doctor said she'd need another eventually. I acknowledge it must be painful.
However, she refuses to exercise. She goes from her bed to recliner to toilet (when she doesn't sneak a diaper....because then she doesn't have to get up). She has opportunities to walk daily, whether inside or out. I'm not expecting her to do laps. Just to be active.
Before, she didn't do her PT after the knee replacement. I see the same thing in store. Her doctor again said he'd refer her to the ortho we saw before, who said to delay it. And he warned her lots of PT would be involved. She told her doctor she needs it urgently to walk. I spoke to him and he said she shouldn't be in pain when walking. He thinks the ortho should make the call.
Thing is, she's not walking. She might feel better if she got around the house. I could buy into the surgery if she upped her exercise now, in advance, maybe lost a little weight. I'd be totally supportive. But I can't be right now. Not when she will not get up for anything. In fact, the recliner is almost a bed, she lays it far back.
So of course her knee hurts when she walks on it, because it's not used to being used. I can beg her to walk with me, even just down the hallway and back at home. I took her to get her hair done and she fell in the parking lot. She said it was because of her knee. That wasn't it, she was fiddling around with her cane and her bags (she wouldn't let me carry) and she was rushing around. She's fine after that. To her, it reinforces the need for surgery.
I suggested PT first (as did the ortho). Nope, surgery. She's 86, and there's Covid to think about. They'd likely want to do skilled nursing facility a day or two after (like before). So....seems a bad idea to me.
I don't want to sound awful but I don't want to deal with the recuperation process if she won't try. I had a heart attack two years ago, and the next day I was cooking for her and sweeping. So yeah, I don't want anything else on my plate.
Any suggestions?
That does NOT mean that you have to move in with her.
Let her go to rehab. Let her hire in-home caregivers.
Why arent YOU getting on with YOUR life?
Mother's orthopod needs to *prescribe* a course of pre-op PT, which must be completed before the surgery can go ahead. X sessions, all checked off by the friendly PT him or herself, well done mother.
But don't you nag her about it.
What I would do is make a list of what she didn't do the last time and she doesn't do and won't do now. I would give this list to the receptionist at the Ortho's office and ask that he read it before his exam. This way he can give Mom all the pros and cons of the surgery and emphasize that she needs to be willing to go for therapy in a rehab facility. I have read on this forum that it seems family members so better having rehab in a facility than at home. More inclined to work with a therapist than family. That way you are sure she is getting the therapy and you get a little vacation and maybe she will lose some weight.
You cannot make someone do what they don't want to. Just need to learn what battles to fight. I am not beyond a little threat "Mom if you get this surgery and don't do what you need to and that leads to me doing more for you, you will then need to go to an AL or LTC. Because physically, I can do no more than I am doing right now or I'll die. Then where will u be."
Whether or not it is time for the knee replacement to be repeated is up to your Mom's Doctor. Whether or not she wishes to have the surgery is up to your Mom. Whether or not she will cooperate with therapy is also up to your Mom. Her own decisions will have their own consequences.
Meanwhile you should be getting on with your own life. It is my fervent hope that you have not moved in with your Mom, nor moved her in with you. Be certain not to do that, be supportive of her choices. If she ends in a wheelchair then she will be in care needed according to what her assets will allow, or on medicaid, and you can visit her.
Wishing you good luck.
Anyway my aunt had very little therapy which surprised me in that she did fine with her surgery and then had a full recovery. You are so right that therapy before and after surgery will help her recover. But a painful knee will Tend to keep you grounded. My aunts ‘blew out’ as she put it. She had to have the surgery or accept the wheel chair. She opted for surgery.
However you are missing the larger picture. What about you? I am concerned for you.
You are so stressed with caring for your mom.. You have had a heart attack and you are emotionally distraught. Who wouldn’t be!
Whether she has the surgery now or not isn’t really the issue.
The issue is how will you manage your or her care if you are in the hospital or worse? And I wonder how worried you are about the Covid for yourself. You have every right to be.
But really what are you doing to take care of you?
If mom has money for hairdressers and shopping, maybe she has money for caregivers. If she doesn’t perhaps it’s time for community Medicaid for her. Check with your local area agency on aging.
Meanwhile, Back off. She’s not incompetent. She’s making her own health care decisions. She’s probably not wrong to have the inevitable surgery sooner rather than later. and there are exercises that don’t involve walking on the knee but rather building the muscles in the leg to help support the knee. those really work.
I was in the hospital twice in June in a hot zone. I was amazed how quiet and peaceful it was. How much excellent care I received. To be perfectly honest with you, I would be more concerned about the therapist coming into my home than mom going into the hospital.
You could use the break of her being out a few days. When she comes home, have the aide lined up. Make it clear that the aide is there to stay at least until she is self sufficient. Maybe longer. I see on your bio that your mom lives with you In your home. It might be time to find her a place of her own where she can be free to spend her days as she sees fit and it isn’t so stressful for you to watch. Right now as you describe it, Even with her pain, she sounds a bit better off than you.
Let us know what she decides and how you intend to put Robert back on the agenda. You matter too and we care.
You are right, I'm having a rough time now. So much going on, normal stuff, but add Covid, a teenager, and some extended family PLUS my mom has made things rough. The activity I mentioned was her going to the hairdresser, she was delighted to get out, and it'd been the first time out of the house in a month. Normally, it's the chair.
We're being careful with Covid and have had good luck so far, just pretty much extreme isolating which is exhausting. How can you be tired when you did nothing? Alas, this is my life.
I appreciate your kind words and ideas.
I would also recommend talking/seeing her otho doctor. He/she can evaluate the joint and prescribe physical therapy, medications... Of course, doing her physical therapy exercises is the best way to strengthen the muscles that protect the joint. I would let the ortho doctor be the one to make the decision on when mom needs a new knee.
Perhaps pain. Maybe arthritis. Your mom may do better after knee replacement.
Funny thing about the Skilled Nursing Facility or Rehab facility. I was talking to my Ortho about knee replacement and he said that he will NOT do a surgery on someone that WANTS to go to rehab facility he said the risk of infection is higher and he thinks the Rehab sites are better and more thorough in post surgery rehabilitation.
As far as COVID the Surgical Sites where most of the joint replacements are being done are awesome. I just had hand surgery and I had to get COVID tested 3 days prior, I was dropped off, only I could enter the facility my temp was checked, I was given another mask, I was the only one in the waiting room. When I was brought back for prep any other patient that was there was in a curtained off room so there was no contact with anyone other than staff. I was very comfortable. So I do not think contracting COVID at the surgical location would be a concern it would be in a rehab facility so that would be a hard no for me. It would be going to a rehab site where the number of people are controlled and contained with proper scheduling. And she would have to follow though at home with the exercises that are given to her. And you would have to be a big part in that in "forcing" her to do the exercises.
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