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See if you can do this: give your mom a sheet of blank paper and a pencil. Ask her to draw you the face of a clock showing 3 o'clock. See what she does. This is part of the MoCa cognitive exam and shows executive brain function. EB function is like the conductor of the orchestra; if the conductor is not there or compromised, the rest of the orchestra hasn't a clue about what to do. When my mom was asked to draw a clock back in 2016, she drew a blob of something nowhere NEAR a clock. That's when I knew what was happening with her, regardless of the 'showtiming' act she was able to successfully put on with everyone. She was diagnosed with progressive dementia shortly thereafter. She's at the moderate stage now, and would definitely not be able to function independently b/c her biggest issues (besides being in a wheelchair) are working gadgets like remotes for the TV, the thermostat, telephone......etc. Pay close attention to your mom to see what other activities of daily life (ADLs) she's having trouble navigating.
It's time for her to have a full medical exam, as the others have said. In the meantime, for your own head, see if you can get her to draw a clock so you'll have an inkling about what's probably going on.
Wishing you the best of luck!
If she is not being supervised or attends functions alone, maybe she needs someone to go with her. To avoid getting lost and to be on time.
If going somewhere is the only issue she has right now (and I would highly doubt it), then make a calendar of her events, what time to get ready and what time to leave the house.
You might want to have her checked out by geriatric doctor about dementia issue
Mom's first "test" was actually done by a nurse in her own place and it was much more extensive than the test our doctor used. The agency we were considering sent her to do an assessment. It was covered by Medicare. She told me that if mom had agreed to some personal care, some of the time aides were there would also be covered by Medicare, but she refused. Perhaps the doctor's office can have someone sent to perform this test (two of us were also present during the "test".)
I had already realized she was having issues - not with time really, but repetition of statements and questions, within minutes, not over a long time. That's when I started learning about dementia. Hindsight revealed other issues, such as no longer cooking and putting supplies I brought away, then asking for more as she'd forget to check the place she put them! I was in the process of hiring aides to check on mom and have them confirm she took her meds from a timed/locked dispenser the nurse suggested. She didn't need a lot of assistance at that point, it was more a sanity check for me. The plan was to increase the hours as needed, so she could remain in her own place longer. It didn't last 2 months (5 days/week, 1 hour/day only) - she refused to let them in. On to plan B - MC.
If they rule out any other condition (there are several that can mimic dementia, esp UTIs, dehydration, overhydration, imbalance in diet, etc.) and the tests do show she's in cognitive decline, it's time to start planning for her care. More intensive testing can be done if they need to determine what type of dementia, such as LBD, but it isn't always necessary. If they plan on medication (no cure!), it would be best to have this testing done. If not, why put her through that?
My mother asked me what time it was, as she sat right in front of a clock that said 9:30. I said, "Look at the clock." She said, "But I can't tell if it's am or pm." She was next to a big window. It was broad daylight. She did not have the logic to put it together. It was one of those moments I got a sense of just how bad off she was. She doesn't have a continuous sense of time anymore. It's like her brain "updates" every 15 minutes, wiping away the previous events to make room for the next input.
I even wrote a book about my husband and I taking care of her, called, “My Mother Has Alzheimer’s and My Dog Has Tapeworms: A Caregiver’s Tale.” I have a chapter entitled, “I “a.m.” Confused, because she was getting confused all the time, about time. We got her a clock that said, “a.m.” and “p.m” and I reinforced with her what that meant.
When she lived independently, before I realized that there was a problem, she offered to pick me up for a dentist appointment, and she showed up 3 hours early, with the excuse that she didn’t want to fight morning rush hour traffic, but she showed up right in the height of morning rush hour.
When I picked her up for a doctor’s appointment, I told her I’d call her at 8 in the morning, telling her I was getting ready to leave, but she called me the previous night at 8 p.m., asking me if I was getting ready to leave. A CAT scan had showed that she had had a previous, mild, undiagnosed stroke, and that might have contributed to her issues; I don’t know. I found out several years later that a stroke is sometimes misdiagnosed as vertigo, and she indeed had 2 episodes of that. Whether or not either of those incidents were really strokes, remains a mystery. Shortly after her time issues, she moved in with us, and I learned that I couldn’t say, “Mom, we’re going to meet a friend for coffee in an hour;” I just had to help her get ready an hour before, (getting dressed, having breakfast, etc.) She’d sometimes put on her socks, then take them off, then put them on again. I think she might have been confused as to whether she was getting up in the morning, or getting ready for bed at night, but that’s just a guess on my part. I agree with others: you might want to get your mom a good medical work-up/evaluation. Best of luck.
Please have a doctor evaluate her for dementia. In early stages, medications can help. In later stages, medications are not effective.
I would arrange a medical review. I would want to rule out other causes (ie vitamin deficiencies etc). The Doctor may want to do a cognitive assessment (Mini Mental) & re-do in 6 months to compare.
Reason found or not, adapting to this change will be the challenge now.
Calenders, reminder txts, alarms, notes are used by some people with varying success but are of zero use to others.
Reading a note 'get ready at 7:30, leave home at 8:30' over & over won't work without comprehension. Or being able to connect the time on the note to the time on the clock. It's actually quite a complicated brain process to plan back from appointment time, travel time, getting ready time etc.
My Mother lost a little of this 'time feeling/planning' after a TIA.
It also sounds like she should not be in Independent Living.
It might be time to get an evaluation done should she be in Assisted Living or possibly Memory Care.
Is it possible that she could leave her apartment at 10:30 at night for an appointment that she has to get to at 11:30 in the morning?
IF this truly is the ONLY problem she is having then a board with the time she has to leave for the appointment not just the appointment time written down. But I suspect that this is not the only trouble your mom is having.
At her age (and since you didn't mention it) she most likely is now in cognitive decline. She not only can't maintain her "usual" functions but is actively losing her abilities and this includes any new learning. Please take her to her doctor for a thorough physical and cognitive (including for a UTI) so that you know what you are dealing with and not exhausting yourself trying to prop up the illusion of independence. Do not let her go by herself and tell you the outcome of this visit. My family didn't realize my MIL wasn't remembering to eat because she'd tell us she ate, give details of what she ate, yet there was no evidence she was eating when we checked her fridge full of rotting food and no dirty dishes or food containers in her garbage. She would tell us she took her meds but that also wasn't accurate.
I'm hoping you (or someone) is her durable PoA. If not, this needs to be put in place before any diagnosis of cognitive decline, so that the legal authority cannot be contested. If she still drives this too must be reconsidered. Countless on this forum have been in your position. It's not easy to be at this juncture of realization of her mental decline. I wish you all the best as you help her.