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I am in a real pickle. My mom has been told by her doctor, and most recently by an emergency room doctor, that she needs to be living in a facility that provides some level of care or in a living situation that does not involve having to climb 2 flights of stairs. Since her hospitalization in June, Visiting Nurses has provided care in her home, and she has been considered homebound. In any case, my mom will NOT agree to do anything (set up care with someone else for when they leave) or make arrangements to have various things done (groceries, laundry, taking out trash, etc. Her nurse, her social worker, me ... we're all broken records and she won't listen. She hung up on me Monday because I was telling her something she didn't want to hear re: hiring help to get to one of her doctor's appointments or risk a fall (which could negatively impact her independence and land her in a nursing home--which she doesn't want).


The nurse told me today that they have never run into a situation like this where someone just absolutely refuses help or is this stubborn. My mom is of sound mind, but is making decisions (as I've pointed out to her) that don't support the independence she still wants. She keeps saying she won't go into a nursing home. I am an only child, not married, and there is no other family on her side to help. I'm it. And it is not an option for her to move in with me or near me. Her needs exceed my ability to meet them, and I know what my limits are. I am willing to help, provide information, facilitate care, etc. but I am unable and unwilling to take on full-time caregiving in this situation.


So my question is twofold:


1) How would you handle this situation? And if you have had to deal with it, did you have to do to get your stubborn parent to take the right action?


2) At what point would a situation be considered neglect (by an adult child) under the law if they are aware of the unsafe situation, but the senior refuses to do anything on their own behalf or spend their money to make needed changes.


I'm at my wit's end and at the end of my rope. I don't know what to do!!!!

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Dstalcup - how old is your mother? You are correct when you wrote: "although it does sound like she's lost it as I read back through this." Ten years is a very long time to not recognize the person your mother has become. There is only so much you can do. Get a pocket calendar where you document your efforts as concern her i.e. telephone calls you made, information you requested, doctor's visits you took her to or were present for, etc. Have you tried signing her up for Meals on Wheels? Does she have money to spend on self care? What happened to her 10-11 years ago? Think back and maybe you can pinpoint something that might shed a little light on this bizarre situation.
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All of these comments were nice to read - nice to know I'm not alone. BUT, my mother has all of her mind. She is and always has been the most stubborn person on earth. She broke her hip Christmas Eve and was released from the surgeon in four weeks - that stubbornness helped her.
While in the rehab/nursing home facility she began refusing to eat, refusing to get out of bed except for her therapy visits. She was dismissed from here because she met her "goals" from the therapists - her hip was fine.
My sister and I moved her further down the way in the facility to a 30 day transition assisted living. At the end of the 30 days she could choose to live there or go home. She refused to do anything. She is down to 81 pounds - never a large woman though. She has bed sores and still refuses to do anything. There is no reasoning with this woman. We had tests done, etc to see if there was actually something physically wrong with her. All that did was make her mad. The transition facility sent her home - they could not keep her for non-compliance. The bed sores would get them into trouble.
Mother is fully aware her doing nothing and eating nothing are the cause of the sores, but she wanted to go home.
So, we brought her home. Now she has home health care three days per week. She is not eating and is still lying in bed most of the day and night. The bed sores are no better.
She will not talk about this at all. Says she knows when she's tired and what to do...leave me alone.
She was so ugly to my husband and me, that we went home and left her for my sister to check on daily. It appears this is the trend for now - mother waits for the home health care to come help her do whatever minimum things she needs done and put medication on her bed sores. She lies around most of the day and eats a few calories of nothing good for you per day - apparently enough to keep her alive for now.
This is NOT the mother I've known all of my life until the last ten years or so. I have no idea who this woman is. I have no idea what her plan it.
I have no idea what to do. She is an adult and has her mind (although it does sound like she's lost it as I read back through this), but she hasn't. She is fully capable of talking, knowing what's happening and manipulating the situation.
As I said, I have no idea what to do.
Thanks for listening.
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mnewcomb....did you get your question answered?
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Just FYI, 7 years ago, and although still relevant today, and although, if one reads backwards far enough, one can address some new poster's questions, the original poster was 7 years ago.
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You're right, you can't force her to do things against her will as long as she happens to be of sound mind as hard as this may need to hear
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angela12, make it very clear to the discharge planner at the hospital that your mother will be going home to NO help. The conditions of her house are such that it may be difficult to get paid help to come in, even if she would allow it. Talk to the hospital's social worker. You do not have authority or responsibility for making decisions on her behalf.

I think I'd also call the MS Society office in your area and ask for advice and if there are any resources that might be available to your mother.

Gosh, this is tough! Do your best, but also keep in mind that this is Not Your Fault. No guilt, please!
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angela12,

One place you can turn to besides the APS is the health department and any other resources within the area that are available for these types of cases. I'm not sure what all is available over there, but I would definitely call around and keep bugging people until you get some leads like I did. Each area is different so each area will have different things to offer. However, definitely the APS and the health department for starters, and go from there following each lead your given and actually show up at those places. Even if they'll are of no help, they'll eventually get sick of seeing you and eventually someone will open up and become useful or give you some useful leads. Persistence always pays off, at least in most cases.
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My mother insists on returning home from the hospital, although she is extremely weak and fragile. She has Multiple Sclerosis, can barely walk, is incontinent, and happy wearing diapers (so sad). She has (had) 2 dogs that she can not care for, yet she "loves" them and they are her only companions. The dogs have completely soiled and destroyed her carpets. I can barely breathe when I am in her home due to the extensive pet urine stains and amount of pet urine in the carpets. I can't help but think this is a health hazard.
I am an only child and can not live with my mother. No other family is available. She is a loner - and has no friends or other family nearby. She prefers to remain in bed most of the day (stays in bed till nearly 11 every morning, plus takes 1-2 naps a day).
She refuses to give me power of attorney thinking I will "put her away" in a nursing home.
I am mostly concerned with the urine infested carpets. What can I do? Can I get someone to come to the house to report this is a health risk? Please help.
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Not having a car was actually a good thing because I won't go out in the bad weather, especially not during winter, and I especially more so won't go out when it's too cold being asthmatic. This really helped me stay home and away from him because not having a car during bad weather and even winter turned out to be a good thing because it Dad calmer than when I was there more often. I started going around less and less because I just got tired of him unloading on me out of frustration for something he did and he did take his frustrations out on me. This turned out to be a very toxic situation and very unhealthy for me, causing me to have no other choice but to almost completely leave the situation. I now understand why I was the only one around, because he pushed everyone else away, and I was just about to be next when the APS finally stepped in and intervened at very long last. I never expected anyone to even help because I sure wasn't going to be able to on my own with lack of manpower and resources to do what really needed to be done as the house he was living in was falling down around him and he was mentally declining and not taking proper care of himself. Sometimes when someone gets stubborn and even combative, it's time to step back and leave them alone. In fact I found that giving them enough rope to hang themselves actually works wonders because they'll slip up sometime.

* Giving them enough rope means backing off and completely leaving them alone and letting the problems reveal themselves to others. I'm glad I did this because had I not, I never would've gotten the help I did at long last.
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Oh yes, maybe I should add more to this. In the modern day of technology where and more people are going paperless to save trees, don't be surprised if you happen to have a hard time finding bank related papers around her house. Going paperless is definitely an option you can sign up for at your bank so that you know longer get any statements except through email. Don't be surprise if you happen to run into this.

Another thing to consider is how some people have even given up the checkbook because more and more places no longer take checks. More and more people these days are relying on plastic and less on the old ways of doing transactions.

If your mom has been in her place for a certain amount of time, she's probably used to the place and just doesn't want to move, this is normal if some people are longtime homesteaders of many years or even a lifetime. Trying to pressure someone to move if they don't want to can actually make them more stubborn, causing them to dig in their heels even deeper and even resent you.

Another area of consideration is possible trust issues, which is probably why she doesn't want anyone taking over her financial affairs if her bills are already being paid with no issues. I don't know how she pays her bills, but as long as they're paid, don't worry about it. She probably knows that as soon as she gives access to her bank account to anyone, she probably has the common sense enough to know what can happen, and I don't blame her for trying to protect her financial stability, so would I. People really do need to protect themselves as they age, and she probably knows she's vulnerable if anyone gets a hold of that bank account. I wouldn't be a bit surprised if she's hidden any documents she may have around the house (if any). Some people with a safe will lock those documents in the safe and hide the key or even keep it on them as a way to prevent anyone from finding that key and getting into the safe, I don't blame them. Many times elders may go to great lengths to lock everything up so no one can find it. However, in the case she may have gone paperless, you probably won't find many (if any) bank statements laying around her house, she probably has more sense than that (if she's well organized).

Keeping one's own independence is something everyone wants, no one wants someone coming along and taking their freedom. This among other reasons is why you're facing a fight, and if she still happens to be competent and still in her right mind, your best bet right now is to just back off and leave her alone and let her be.

If you really want to help her, you may be observant as to how well she can actually move around her house. If she can't navigate her house all that well and it's not cluttered, you may offer her a wheelchair to help her get around if she can't walk that well. If she doesn't need a wheelchair, you might try a walker and see if she'll use it. I would definitely try to find clever ways to support her right where she is in stead of trying to change her, because trying to change her and force her to do what she doesn't want to do is only going to make her combative, and her combativeness is a strong hint to just back off if she doesn't want or need your help and you try to force her. She's probably getting to a point by now where she's starting to resent you.

Instead of trying to force your will on her, why not just support her and love her right where she is until she is ready to make a change? This would be far more appreciated than trying to force someone into something they didn't want, and this will definitely cause bitterness and she'll most likely hate you. Forcing your will on her is actually destroying your relationship, this destroyed many relationships, don't do that if you really love her. If you love her, let her go and live her life. It's been said that if you really love something, let it go. If it returns to you, it's yours. If it doesn't, it never was. I think your best bet right now is to just take your hands off of the situation and step back to see the big picture. In fact, it's probably good for you to take a break and leave her alone for a while, just stay away for at least a few days. It'll be hard, but not impossible. This is one of those situations where you may have to let whatever happens happen. I was very close to having to do this with my foster dad when he developed dementia and there was no outside help to step in and intervene. I really didn't want this to be dad's fate, I just didn't want to walk in one day and find him dead. What I did was I stepped back and started reducing my visits to a point. Not having a car was actually a good thing because I won't go out in the bad weather, especially not during winter, and I especially more so won't go out when it's too cold being asthmatic. This really helped me stay home and away from him because not having a car during bad weather and even winter turned out to be a good thing because it D
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As the saying goes, you can lead a horse to water, but you can't make him drink it. In other words, you can talk to your mom until the cows come home which is never. If she's still of sound mind then there's probably not going to be much you can do until she declines mentally and someone becomes her guardian.
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Ginger, you have done what can be done without getting guardianship and making decisions for them against their will. You even managed to sneak around and eliminate an important hazard - good work there!

As you pointed out, something bad will eventually happen, and then so will the change in their living situation. Don't move them in with you or you in with them out of your sense of guilt and duty - everyone will hate every minute of it. And I know you think of your mom as the victim who deserves a better life, but honestly - she stayed with your dad and did not defend you; granted women of her generation were taught NOT to stand up to abuse and to defer to male authority - and she may not know what to do without him ruling the roost and probablly does not want to leave the roost either. How sure are you she would really be happy in your care either? And, you can't be guaranteed that Dad will end up in hospital and unable to go home or pass on first. Your husband and you sacrificing even more of your selves than you already are will not make mom and dad happier or safer. You say you promised Mom "no nursing home" but that would not make it wrong to find an assisted living or independent living place at any point, depending what she qualifies for.

This is a stressful time and you are propping your parents up in a situation that is marginal and can't be maintained long term. Your mental and physical health are deserving of attention. This ordeal will end - try to keep hope alive - bu you do need to make sure it doe not end by YOU being the first one to go. That happens to overextended caregivers. Put your own oxygen mask on first. Take a minute and at least pat yourself on the back for holding up and doing as much as you have done. It is extraordinary. YOU are extraordinary. Your sibs maybe stay away and limit their involvement out of healthy self-preservation at this point. It is sad that your dad is such a completely self-centered, macho man who is happy to make others miserable when he has the power to. As far as you possibly can, stop giving him the power to make you miserable. Do what you can to help without killing yourself, try again later with the Alz visitor or even APS, and realize that you have done enough.

Mmewcomb - your Mom may need Adult Protective Services to look in on this if he does not recover his walking ability and stays bedridden, or at a minimum get a home health nursing/visiting nurse to do an assessment in there. If he has had a stroke, the chance to do anything to reverse it is long past, but if he gets belligerent or anything a second attempt to get him to the ER can be made. Hopefully there is some alternative to leaving Mom trying to do what she cannot do.

Our elders who refuse care and push away the hands that would help them do not realize the extra burden and sadness they cause, and sometimes they do it because they just want to keep their independence even if they really can't, while saying things like "I don't want to be a burden..."
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My mother who is 83 has a live in boyfriend who is 78 and he has been unable to walk for two days. My mother called an ambulance but he refused to go to the hospital. The home they live in is my mother's house. How can we get him to go to a hospital? My mother is not physically able to care for him, with him being bedridden?
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Mom is 87, dad is 92. Both have moderate dementia, but still live in their home because mom threatens suicide if we even mention the words "nursing home ". Dad was verbally, psychologically and physically abusive to us kids growing up, and extremely demanding to my mom - he always had to get his way or he would throw a tantrum. They are supposed to use a walker all the time, but both have had several falls, severe enough to go to the ER. My mom once fell so hard on the cement sidewalk that she broke a tooth and both sides of her jaw. They refuse to move to the 1st floor of their 2nd floor home because "robbers will break in and steal everything." They think the same about visiting nurses, even their own kids. Everyone is out to kill them and steal everything they own.

I am the youngest (53) and my husband and I live in the same town. I am POA because my older brother and sister (who live in the next town over) "don't have the time" or the interest. My sister has never worked and sits at home all day while I (until recently) was working full-time and raising 2 kids. My brother is divorced with grown kids, but works 2 jobs so he "doesn't have the time or the energy" to do more than mow the lawn or shovel the snow there. My husband and I do the bills, banking, legal stuff, laundry and anything else that needs fixing (the TV remote, the radio, clocks, light bulbs, blood pressure machine, etc.) We were also doing the groceries until I finally told my sister that she has to help out with SOMETHING. She also takes them to their doctor appointments now because I had unsuccessful eye surgery and can no longer drive.

My brother & sister say they have gotten over our childhood abuse, yet they will only do their assigned chore and leave immediately because it's too stressful to spend time with my my father. They are both in denial that my parents need more care than 30 minutes a few times a week. At the risk of my marriage and sanity, I have offered to take both parents in to live with my husband and me, but my parents refused. Their tenant on the 1st floor is moving out and I think this is an ideal time for my husband and I to move in there and take care of my parents 24/7. I know my mother loves the idea, but father emphatically said "no" because he hates my husband and me, even though we've been their primary caretakers for the last 15 years. We are the only ones to host every holiday at our house (because my sister is too lazy and my brother is single and can't cook), and we always brought my parents holiday meals when they became too frail to travel. My husband spends more time there taking care of them than my brother, sister and brother-in-law combined.

My husband has not been able to find a job in over a year, and my disability check does not go very far. My father allowed my brother to live in their spare apartment after 2 divorces, and allowed my son (his grandson) to live there after he graduated from college. The last tenant was an EMT who picked them up when he heard them fall upstairs, but he has moved out. I have clinical depression, panic attacks, anxiety disorder, visual impairment, heart disease with a cardiac stent, fibromyalgia, IBS, low self-confidence and no self-esteem. My father refusing to help us after we've done so much for them really hurts. It would be a win/win for all of us, but my siblings (and my mom) are still so afraid of getting my father mad that they won't back me up. Like others I've read about here, we are just waiting for one of them to end up in a hospital so they can be sent to a NH. Ideally my father, because I promised my mom I would not put her in a NH, and would take her in to care for her full-time. I just want my mom to have some peace and happiness, before she dies, without my dad's tyranny.

I've met with a rep from the Alzheimer's Center near us. She came to my parents' house to evaluate them and their house, but my father locked himself in his room the whole time. My mother "showboated" to look normal and healthy. The rep pointed out fire hazards that needed to be fixed, but when I told my father, he refused to have anything fixed because "it was his house and nobody is going to tell him how he can live in it." I had to secretly get an electrician to change their fuse box to circuit breakers so their house insurance wouldn't be cancelled.

I know this is long - other than my husband, I just don't get a lot of emotional support from anyone, and I am mentally exhausted. I'm tired of fighting with dad to do the right things to take care of both of my parents, and my depression is getting worse every day...
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My Mom is 83 Has lived with me for 18 years, 4 years after my father's death. She has dementia now and is very stubborn.....doesn't want my help with anything, thinks she can do everything. She is constantly hiding all her stuff, and then can find it. One day I found her purse for her 6 times. She thinks people come into the house and told me she has seen them and told them to get out. I am constantly trying to assure her no one can get into the house......that only makes her mad.....Anything I say to her she is on the defensive and usually ends up in an argument. She thinks I'm her sister half the time.......and I tell her No I'm your daughter, sometimes she will believe me, other times she doesn't. If I don't talk to avoid an argument, she thinks I'm mad at her. She has her finances in a mess but won't let me help her.....won't believe anything I tell her. How do I deal with this? MJ
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My Mom is 83 Has lived with me for 18 years, 4 years after my father's death. She has dementia now and is very stubborn.....doesn't want my help with anything, thinks she can do everything. She is constantly hiding all her stuff, and then can find it. One day I found her purse for her 6 times. She thinks people come into the house and told me she has seen them and told them to get out. I am constantly trying to assure her no one can get into the house......that only makes her mad.....Anything I say to her she is on the defensive and usually ends up in an argument. She thinks I'm her sister half the time.......and I tell her No I'm your daughter, sometimes she will believe me, other times she doesn't. If I don't talk to avoid an argument, she thinks I'm mad at her. She has her finances in a mess but won't let me help her.....won't believe anything I tell her. How do I deal with this? MJ
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My Mom was told she couldn't stay alone anymore. She decided to go into a nursing home. She hates it and fights with her dialysis doctor because he won't release her to go back to her apartment. She falls a lot and being the oldest of 8 children the responsibility falls on my shoulders alone. No one even visits. She is threatening to walk out of the nursing home. Very Stubborn and won't listen to me. What can I do?
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My husband is 91 he hasn t talked to our son and daughter and wife (for 49 years married) for five months.Especially me his wife calls all kind of names.It seems we always hit a stone wall nobody is willing to help.His PSA is 8 no medicine because he has his canser for 15 years and no pills help him anymore.He believes in vitamins.He leaves the house in the morning and comes back at night.He doesnt go to the doctor for a scan.Instead the last years of his life to enjoy his wife and family he always angry and rage
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Sunflo, you endured some of the worst communication and lack of discharge planning I've ever heard of. Hope things have turned around!
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Thanks so much, I WISH I could send you flowers. I was flipping thru answers to this post and see responses I've made since 2012... Lol and definitely nothing has gotten better for sure. I've learned a lot. Mom had a stroke in Oct 2015 and I spent 3days with history and social worker and they had me so sure she would likely go to rehab and I was rubbing my hands together thinking I can finally get opportunity to move her near me to memory care. Well last day after her hospital antics they decided to try PT, OT, SP, visiting nurses at her home. I told SW they won't last thru day 1. Mom was all accepting and cooperative that she would comply rather than go to rehab...I was furious they even gave her the choice when Drs and nurses couldn't explain anything to her or get her to comprehend about the stroke and meds....sure enough we got home and I she refused all therapies and nursing care. I made nurse tell her that if she didn't let nurses come they would send her to rehab. It was a weekly battle and a nightmare for me at work with the constant calls from mom and nurses.

Now I have APS getting involved and saying she needs help which is obvious but honestly I thought there would be more medical evaluations, reports etc...I've answered all their questions but not getting any shared feedback info on what their care plan suggestion will be.

This happened to me a few yrs back when all anyone would say is you have to come and pick up your mother from behavioral center. I demanded a care team exit meeting and it was scheduled. They cancelled once I drove 4 hrs and literally dropped mom in the hallway and said sign here for her discharge. I was shocked and said I wasn't leaving without instruction. Nurse finally met with me hours later, dr unavailable...and she proceeded to give me this long care and dr and psychiatry, etc list for follow up. I was shocked, I said well your acting like she needs 24/7 care vs a couple days a week aid...she stated that she needed full time care. I was livid. 10 days before I had run out and put down payment on a bed at residential care near me. They were great and helped me organize paperwork admission. My husband drove 6 hrs to moms house to bring back furniture, personal items, etc to make new place "home"; then moved it all back when this rehab said no she could return to her home and dr didn't feel comfortable signing incompetency.

So in essence, even with planning, my experience has been they just want to dump the problem on anyone who even knows the elder or the warm body who happens to show up at discharge.

Definitely, the system needs more emergency temporary care system if elder can't return or remain in their home while family gets ducks in a row.

I'm not dragging my feet, but I want assurance that this is going to happen and mom can be placed. I'm looking into places, but it will be extremely traumatic for an angry mom and I'm expecting her to be combative so I have to find the right place that can redirect her and handle her. I don't want to get her kicked out of places or overly medicated.
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Sunflo, this is tough stuff, but once they get the incompetency documented, they may be saving you from having to start a guardianship procedure. It would be lovely if they can play bad cop and you can be good cop, telling her how APS kicked her out of her home and you found her this lovely new home and having her believe it, but it may or may not work out that way. The reality is that right now she is neither safe nor happy. Once they recognize officially that she cannot make her own decisions because she truly cannot fend for herself, it will be up to you and them to find a way for her to be safe, but happy may be up to her.

Do start looking at places that might be to her taste in terms of post-rehab assisted living or skilled nursing. From what you describe, she is almost certain to max out on rehab progress and/or use up her days and need long-term placement rather than ever be able to return home to live independently, as much as she may wish to. As far as banking, once you have access to her paperwork, which will probalby mean searching her house to find all the critical documents and account numbers, you can likely set up online access. Or, the facility might be able to handle it by becoming her SSI representative payee instead of you; that is actually a separate process from POA. Talk to the director and/or social worker at the facility and see what they can tell you. Consider getting an estate planner or eldercare attorney to help you through things as well; it is OK to use Mom's funds for this purpose. Finally, find a real estate person because most likely you want to sell the home after it is cleaned up - and if it is too big of a task to clean it out yourself, there are companies that will do that; an estate sale is another possibility as long as it is not in too severe a condition, i.e. reaching the level of biohazard.

There is a LOT to this. A lot of work. A lot of phone calls. Prepare to keep files with all her important numbers, keep lots of copies of your POA both financial and medical, and the incapacity letter or letters handy because various people will need this. Do not sweat over her feeling angry at you or being unhappy that she cannot continue to live independently. She fought tooth and nail but that battle was inevitably lost to her progression of dementia; that's sad, yes; all you can do is try to make the best of it. You cannot worry as much about actually pleasing her or having her not hate you, because top priority is simply to get her cared for and safe.

We did have some social service involvement with my husband's parents in Philadelphia years ago. When things did fall apart, they got his mom into a geropsych and then his side of the family that lived closer found her longer-term placement. They will likely get the emergency situation resolved but leave moving her closer to you up to you. There have been children caregivers who do not actually interact with their mom or dad but who manage the finances and keep an eye on the medical care and all; there have been some who just could not do it at all and had to let mom or dad be a ward of the state. One final bit of advice, and not intended the least bit cynically - cultivate a relationship with your APS person or persons - compliment them and thank them and tell them just how hard and overwhelming you can see that their work is. You might even bring them a batch of cupcakes or flowers or something. They are overworked people with some really tough situations, and most of them really have compassion and will try very hard to do the right thing; sometimes they screw up or a doctor or a judge ties their hands, but they make the right calls and do the right things more often than not.
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It has been some time since I've been on but y'all provide such great expert advice. I need your help now.

Mom is 93 with dementia, living isolated alone and the usual escalating paranoia, delusions, distrust. I'm her daughter out of state about 6 hrs away. Long story but recently becoming unsafe and vulnerable. Admittedly I haven't visited in a couple months because I just don't have it in me to fight with her.
Police have been ther 4x in a month, well-check, her claiming she was burglarized and her purse stolen (she filed report with police that I stole and insisted I also be reported to my home state police), purse was found a few days later, she is withdrawing cash from bank that police saw and concerned them, she doesn't remember any of this. The electric and water were cut off for failure to pay...she had cancelled her checks in April (paranoia) unbeknownst to us. Utility company was concerned and reported the disconnection to APS.

APS took mom to bank for money order and discovered checks etc and got her utilities turned back on. Stated that mom hadn't showered and wearing dirty clothes. I welcomed call and provided tremendous background documentation to help them make a case and stated that I haven't been able to get her to budge nor have a doctor write incompetency though she has been diagnosed with dementia for 5 yrs. APS explained that they would get dr to sign and go to city attorney. I told APS that I wanted them to be the bad guys and they would have to work with legal system to get her into short term rehab or residential care and that I would work to find residential care near me.

Today they wanted my DPOA copy, which I provided, they are hoping to get dr to write she is not competent.

Mom will be ballistic.

APS stated "well now maybe with this you can avoid court hearing and court fees".

I'm scared. Will they just wash their hands and turn mom over to me as my problem? I won't have her banking worked out, a place for her to go, she can't stay with me, and I'm worried APS just wants to close the case and has no intention of helping me get her into short term rehab or similar so I can medically transfer her here when we have a bed for her.

what can or should I be doing? What can I request APS do to make mom safe while working on good solutions to minimally traumatized mom. I can live with her hating me once I get her placed; but I absolutely don't want to be the one she sees as physically removing from her home and invoking POA.

Has anyone had to do this? She is vicious and has always been vehement to stay in her home--but she refuses in home assistance of any sort and trusts no one in her home even me and my husband.

Please let me know your experience with APS.
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To AmyGrace and everyone on here, No worries, I do know what you meant to write about the "progression of things" and "made her lose her independence". I too have had trouble writing on here, and making some mistakes. I see my mistakes after I have already posted them. I was typing too fast, and meant to say that my Mother lost her youngest SISTER (not one of her kids) and I left that out by mistake. Anyway, just when we all reach a certain age, such as retirement age, and just when we may have some extra money to do something we enjoy, or have been wanting to do for some time, but we did not have the time or the means, and just when we want to plan to have some fun in life - we get hit with our Parent's needing help. Of course, I love my Mother more than life, and I will do anything for her, but I realize, now, that we are expected to give far more than we possibly can, or we are expected by our Parents and our relatives to just give in and do everything their way. I feel that there is no give and take at all, nothing is fair for us, and that we have to comply with their wishes, no matter how ridiculous that may be. It also means that we have to give up our entire Lives to provide some loving care, but how fair is that? I feel that, sometimes, our Parents expect way too much of us, at least some Parents do, maybe not all. Thanks to all.
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I wish we could edit these things. I meant there was a progression of things which made her lose her independence.
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CTTN55. What you wrote reminded me of my mother. Looking back, there was a progression of things that made her lose her. She fought hard against it. First she stopped taking the shuttle at IL because she said she couldn't finish the shopping before the shuttle came back for them. So I took her shopping and I could see she didn't remember what she put in her basket, and bought strange things. It took forever, and we would argue about what she would buy. So I started to do it for her which she hated. She insisted on going with me, and she could barely get to the middle of the store before she wanted to go home (unsteady, confused and not enough energy) Its so very sad. I guess we will all go through it - either not recognizing when we can no longer do the things we did or refusing to admit it. It makes the child feel mean, taking over and assuming the role of mom as they become more helpless.
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In attempting to discuss arrangements when my mother no longer drives (within the next few months), I told her I'd take her grocery list to the store with me when I do my family's shopping. She got real quiet...I think she will not like this, just as your mother doesn't like it, EastEagle. She is very unsteady on her feet, and it takes f o r e v e r.
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My Mother does not have Dementia, as far as I can tell. I have written about her before. However, I am having a difficult time understanding her behavior, maybe someone has some advice for me? My Mom will 92 years old in August and is still living alone, in the 3 family house that she owns. She is legally blind in one eye, has hearing loss, her balance is much worse now, & she does not eat much at all. She does have digestive problems, but this is a chronic condition which she has had her entire life. Anyway, just this week, my Mother's youngest passed away at age 75. She was very sick from the complications of having Diabetes since she was 30 years old. My brother took our Mother to the hospital to see her Sister, for the last time. It was very sad. As I said, my Mother has a really hard time to walk, she can't see where she is going, and her balance is way off. So, at the entrance to the hospital, where they have a collection of wheelchairs, either my brother or sister-in-law decided to get a wheelchair for my Mother (they did not ask for her permission) because they were at the Mass General Hospital, and it was a very long walk to my Aunt's room. I was just talking to my Mother today, and she is furious that my brother got the wheelchair, even though my Mother is very aware that it would have taken them a very long time to walk her to the room. I told her that she could have refused to get into the wheelchair, but for whatever reason, she did not say No to him. If walking with my Mother, Someone has to hold her up under her arm, so she won't fall. My Mother is not happy about the wheelchair at all. She told me today, that she will not go to the family gathering for my Aunt, if she cannot do all the walking by herself, without help, and she will not go if a wheelchair is needed. Also, she refuses to let my Brother do the food shopping for her, she said she wants to go with him. Also, anytime that she does go out - she will not use a cane, or a walker. She said it takes her along time to go thru the supermarket, but she wants to pick out all her own food. Also, my brother pays for her food, and she does not like that either. So, she has decided to go without food in the house, until she can get to the market herself. She will either take a cab, or get a ride from her Cousin. But she will not give a shopping list to my brother. She says that he does not want to take her to the store, he wants to do the shopping for her, and she will not go along with that plan. Does anyone have any advice or thoughts about this situation?? Should I just let my Mother have her own way, or should I intervene in some way. By the way, she will not let me order her food on line, which can be delivered right to her door. Help, I am going crazy!! Thanks Everyone!
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One thing to keep in mind is that the "relationship" is already "ruined" by the dementia itself in some of these cases. Don't let a fear of offending them be the reason not to go after guardianship or to get Adult Protecetive Services involved if they truly need it. Our system tends to err on the side of individual autonomy - danger to self and others is a common standard, but sometimes a court will additionally consider evidence of mental limitations via cognitive testing...of course sometimes a court will be fooled by a little "showtimer's" just as some doctors are fooled. If you are looking for guardianship, bring evidence - unpaid bills, photos of unsafe conditions, maybe even photos with the way it was before the dementia set in that can be compared, and take time to get possible witnesses on the right page with you - understanding that to get help they have to portray the person as truly unable to care for themsevles, not "sharp as a tack" because they can converse and recognize familiar people. In my own family people hesitated to take those pictures or involve social services - though when it all fell apart, they had to be involved. Pity and embarrassment for the person who needs help can be deadly. My MIL threatened to call the police on my BIL when he tried to help at all, and he backed right off - I think the whole mess may have been part of what inspired his daughter, my niece, to become an eldercare attorney. Get a good attorney - judge from the web site and from others if you know of anyone who has used them - and if you give it your best shot and the whole thing fails, you are probably not going to be worse off than you are now, plus you will know that you gave it your best shot. The state may have to take over later once things get even worse...
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My mother lives in California and I live in Nevada (@ 6 hrs away). She has dementia but not sure if it's Alzheimers because she refuses to go to the doctor. Luckily she has no health issues (heart, blood pressure etc) so other than her mind, she's physically pretty healthy for 83. I'm an only child and my father passed several years ago. She lives alone, refuses all assistance- we had to take her vehicle 2 1/2 years ago-the police impounded it after several warnings that her license is suspended. I am going to file for guardianship but California has some pretty strict laws and I doubt I'll be successful. Does anyone have any suggestions on how to assure success?
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My mother had had multiple heart attack/stroke,has had to have CPR twice. She had short term memory issues,will not follow her doctors orders,she poorly takes care of herself and her husband who had mild dementia. They live in a home that is full of mold. They refuse help from their children and have just about alienated us! I moved in after her last heart attack,but I've run out of the ability to continue living with them...they have become mean, Ican't toletate it any longer. What doI do?
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