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Particulars:
Yes, I have found her awake and them asleep. The house is not getting cleaned, a fairly new problem (same caregivers). Nutritious meals are not prepared for her. I'm also noticing blankets laying about and various beds in the house with rumpled covers...my Mom is meticulous. A crease or lump in a bed cover makes her crazy. She flawlessly makes her bed every morning. You couldn't find a wrinkle in the thing with a magnifying glass...wife to an x-military man. LOL
My realizations:
I didn't mind when a caregiver occasionally napped with her in the same room. I understand boredom and fatique. My problem is that is has become a habit. For months after my first experience of finding a care giver asleep I said nothing. Now my inaction is interpreted as permission. Mom and I've talked about it and neither of us is comfortable with a care giver sleeping on a daytime shift. A paid daytime shift of 8 hours should not need to sleep on the job, especially if Mom is awake. It is a safety, ethical/professionalism issue for me. It is also against the agencies own policies. I need to discuss with the care givers my feelings about sleeping on the job and share with them what Mom has told me and I know for myself. I will talk to a care giver before going to the agency. I realize I need to set some guidelines. If Mom is awake the caregiver should be awake. If they can do chores in an adjacent room while she sleeps, that is the priority. If daily chores are done, then stay in the room where she's sleeping and do something that won't disturb her. I'm fine with the suggested items-read, computer (work, home, even games, just nothing illicit obviously), correspondence, crafts, music w/headphones (1 in, 1 out so she can be heard), study, etc.
I've also realized that my Mom's care needs have changed. I need to keep updating care giver responsibilities as her condition changes. She used to drive the household duties, but isn't doing that now. I need to be have some guidelines for my care givers about duties. From all the input it sounds like guidelines are helpful to all concerned.
Thanks for giving me clarity and piece of mind on the issue! Mom and I thank you!
I would talk to Mom first about her concerns and what she wants. Then I would talk to the caregiver. There is probably a happy medium somewhere. But ultimately, if the caregiver needs to stay away while Mom sleeps, they need to stay awake.
I'm not in this situation, but if it were me, I would probably have a problem with it. The caregiver is not working early morning or late evening. Its 11am to 7pm, hours of the day that it should not be difficult to stay awake when you are paid to do so. I think its different when you have a family person caring for a relative vs someone who is paid to come into your home for this specific task. Its part of the job that you are renumerated for. Obviously there is a reason why a caregiver is needed to stay in the room with them when they sleep. If the caregiver is sleeping, how can they possibly watch for problems? This caregiver doesn't wake with Mom, otherwise Mom wouldn't have said it bothers her.
It nearly killed me. I was not being paid. It was a really bad situation. Still is.
I had to leave mom to fend for herself. Mom won't allow in home care. & my mom is an alcoholic. She's dirty. Smells. Won't shower. Is mean. Sleeps weird times during the day. She sneaks calling a taxi to have her wine delivered. Lost her drivers license. To a DUI. Which I called the police on to catch her drunk driving. Not good at all. !!!!!
As far as this caregiver napping. While on shift. I think it's fair to say that's between the care giver. The patient. & the person paying the bill.
In my moms case. My brother who is supposed to be her poa. He should have gone down & found a part time caregiver to at least bathe mother.
He Has done nothing. I couldn't let mom sit in dirty clothes. Day after day. Not showering. Not washing hair.
My situation is pretty extreme.
The lesson it taught me. Is you never know what another family is dealing with.
I am still having major panic attacks from trying to help my mom.
Too emotional. Too draining.
Did I sleep when needed. ??? Not at first. Now I regret that.
My body is paying the price trying to be superwoman.
Not fun.
The ? Above is should a caregiver take naps. Depends on the entire situation. If we were paying help on my mom. & that person needs an hour nap to get thru the day.
I would say amen. Happy snoozing. Only because being a care giver was the hardest thing besides giving birth to my babies that I've done in my entire life.
Peace to everyone.
Do the best you can.
D
Circumstances are always to be considered. If for some reason one would have an individual to care for that would "quietly" get up and be hard to hear them arise from their bed, then slip away from caregiver and become lost in the community, or get into something dangerous in the house and hurt themselves, that might be another matter. ( you may consider putting an alarm on the bed that goes off if mother leaves the bed. She might have to be conditioned to accept it for her own good. ) They use those in hospitals and other places that are concerned for the well being of a roaming individual or one who has special needs . One has to be balanced and reasonable. Right? My particular case is a bed fast husband who does not move much in the bed anymore. Much less get out of it. He sleeps lots, and watches some TV when awake, which I leave on for his spurts of wakefulness. He is fed, washed, and cared for like a disabled child. So when his needs are finished each time slot, there would be no concern if the caregiver slept, if the major chores or duties had been cared for.
Circumstances and reasonableness enter in. Here is a hug for your sincere concern.
In my line, my longest shift was three hours. Sometimes when my work was finished I would just sit and talk or ask if there were any extra things they needed doing?
After a couple of weeks some of these folks houses were so spic and span after three hours of ME a day, it was hard to find anything baring putting a new roof on the place, lol.
One hoarder I worked for let me clean her house out over a period of months... something she would never let the family do. Each item had to be gone over with absolute approval from her.
ME: I could get you all the empty milk jugs you need from a recycle center. If we toss these now, I promise I will bring you brand new ones, if you need them.
I eventually made her little trailer from complete disaster into a lovely place. The family was impressed to say the least!
That is when she asked me to make decorations for her great grandaughters wedding. And I did it. She had hoarded thousands of plastic flowers, ribbon, you name it. She was SO proud, pointing out to the family that they had wanted to throw all these lovely things away. True, however it required lots of ammonia and soap and an artists touch to make these things valuable again.
I would have probably been fired for doing this mind you. Although my company didn't mind if you sat and went through old photo albums with them for hours.
If you trust this caregiver, and she is the sort that CAN cat nap and wake up more effective than someone who is expected to prop her eyes open with toothpicks because she is not allowed to move or make a sound, then I don't see the problem?
I am not sure what you expect this caregiver to do if she is needs to be in the presence of your mum, and also not make a sound?
This site makes a huge difference. Well, to my life anyway.
I am starting to wonder how much memory we lose from simply going quiet.
I am remembering things here, that I thought were forgotten.
:Too Long Didn't Read... "your mum has someone to nap with, all watched over."
I think it is lovely.
I wish some of us could trade off... like we did when we had toddlers.
Our elders would have company and we would get a break.
A play date we call it whith children.
Our parents could get together and complain about how much we suck.
"Ohhhh, you think YOUR daughter is awful, wait till you hear what mine did the other day" lol.
Our "helper" was a very nice lady, competent, working toward her LVN, and we liked her. But my mom was having none of someone else doing her personal care. So, our lady accompanied us yes two doctors appointments, did a little light housekeeping, making mom's bed, grocery shopping, other errands and watching mom on the few occasions that I needed to nap during the day because my mom was a sundowner.
What EVER did i do before she came (I mention, sarcastically)?? Well, I already had things set up. A ROOM MONITOR for one thing. My mom rested a lot and I didn't want her disturbed. Ultimately it was left up to me to handle my moms schedule. I believe my sister felt that the helper was supervising me, but the helper believed that I was supervising her and she considers me her "boss". We laughed about my sister's disconnect, behind her back of course.
Because I am the kind of person who tends to get involved with other people, I knew our helper's life situation. Her husband had recently passed away unexpectedly, daughter and schizophrenic spouse with two children living with her, 1 unemployed son she was helping out. She was tired, yet studying to better herself. AND I consider paid caregiving generally a thankless job, overworked and underpaid.
She helped us for nearly two years until my mom passed away. We had a reclining chair in the living room. And a couple of nice Afghans. I told her to rest whenever she wanted as long as my mother with cared for. Sometimes she and I chatted because neither was tired. Sometimes I would work on my computer well she studied or rested. Sometimes we would both rest. It was just a matter of who kept the monitor receiver. One search of us had it at all times when my mom was resting. One peep out of my mom and one of us was on alert.
The operative part of the caretaking, IMO, is "care". I was in a more obvious position to watch whether or not someone else worked. I never, EVER, begrudged her the ability to rest. In fact, I ENCOURAGED it. I believe it made her happier and more capable of taking care of my mom.
Boni I am sure you are not comfortable going to sleep before your mother but even so something could happen during the night when you were asleep
Behaving responsibly is the key here and making it clear to your caregivers on day one what your expectations are. People die next to their spouses at night all the time. My insurance agent did just that. His wife woke up and realized he was not snoring and he was very dead
Being a care-giver is a big responsibility.
these caregiver are trained to do a great job.
they are only human just like you.and so what if they nap .
They are following your mom's schedule not yours.
caregiver have kids and families and for them to do such a caring empathetic is a godly thing,
bless all caregive,PSW, RN'S and RNA"s.
like you said no theft,abuse but on safety, and keeping ur mom active well fed and taking her mind of depressing things,
I hope this reply answers your question.
sharon