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I would suggest that at the care meeting. Your mother may need a different sort of care facility from your dad.
I won't be alone with my mom and they know it, but were still saying I would "have to" take her.
Nope! They have Medicare Advantage, so hopefully it pays/reimburses something...
- Yes to separation.
- Yes to evaluation. I'd be open to medication based on eval. Could be anything - eg stroke, dementia but a full physical & mental eval hopefully brings a diagnosis & treatment plan.
- Law enforcement - Avoid.
Not sure avout US, but where I am too many people with mental illness/cognitive changes injured in Police confrontations.
- Absolutely no to driving Mother yourself if she is unpredictable. (Barb B may reply with her dire tale of how that can go). Arrange supervised medical transport instead.
She has beaten up on dad in the past -in front of caregivers!- and she was competent then. I don't know how to get her evaluated when she tells anyone who will listen that she does NOT need to see a doctor (and has been saying that for years). I do think the facility is open to having her transported to the ER for a psych workup based on her abusive behavior. It could very well be a UTI or some such.
I really appreciate your insights!
My mom, the sweetest person in the world, tried to grab the steering wheel from my husband as we drove her from rehab to a new AL. Don't know why, but if it had been me driving, we'd all have been in a ditch
From there on in, mom was transported by ambulette to doc appointments and the like.
My mom is a hellcat if she doesn't get her way, so this transport needs to be handled by professionals.
She needs memory care.
Likely that is what this meeting is about.
Yes to the evaluation. Yes to higher placement. And yes to guardianship in protection of your Dad. If you are POA or next of kind then they aren't punting this in your direction, it IS in your direction. If you feel incapable of handling this then do not take on any POA or higher fiduciary duty and tell them that Mom is going to have to move into the guardianship of the state so she can be evaluated and cared for.
I am assuming that this is not a new and sudden behavior switch that can be due to a bladder infection or a stroke, or something else undiagnosed.
To be frank, you have an amazing facility there. Most would have had Mom in EF whether she wanted to go or not. That is ONE quite way to get evaluation. If it is mentioned as an option I would jump on it as this will get complicated when Mom's care costs easily twice what Dad's does for memory care and she requires Medicaid and separation of financial assets.
There are some hard times coming. No question about it.
What is EF? (And it is an amazing facility!).
I do feel that you must respect the facility’s need for you to be involved with this matter, certainly for your dad’s sake, also the staff and other residents at the facility. How is your dad handling this situation?
Your mom has to be evaluated because of her behavior. No matter if she is completely competent or not she isn’t behaving normally at this point in time.
Did they give you a reason as to why the doctor at her facility wants nothing to do with her?
Do not drive her anywhere. Allow them to transport her to be evaluated.
Law enforcement, eh, that’s tricky. It depends on the situation.
I know a woman who has a son in his 20’s who has severe autism and possibly other mental health issues. He is extremely violent with his mom and grandmother. Law enforcement won’t get involved due to his autism. They have left it up to mental health professionals to deal with.
Best wishes to you and your family.
Yes, I am definitely planning to go to the care team meeting and work with them as best I can.
Right now dad keeps falling every other day or so. He is completely cut off from the world due to his profound deafness (mom won't let him wear hearing aids, I use an amplifier when I do have to go see them). When he has fallen, the staff has seen her pulling his hair and screaming at him. I honestly wonder if she pushes him. I think my father is just stoically enduring her, as she has always been abusive to him (71 years of marriage!).
The doctor in the facility just was fed up since she told him there is nothing that can be done for her back pain, which she was complaining loudly about.
It's a tough situation, but the only way out is through I guess!
I can't tell you how much just venting to this forum helps me though!
I don't think Divorce is the answer, Moms entitled to her 50%. Plus, with Dementia, Dad is not competent to sign a contract. I have given u the basics. An Elder lawyer can go into it more thoroughly.
I think the first step is to separate them and make it clear to mom that she cannot abuse dad any more FULL STOP. She's been doing it as long as I can remember, but it was mostly "just" verbal/emotional abuse, and back in the day, he could give as good as he got. (They were fun parents! /sarcasm).
Then tell her that her only chance of living with him again is to get a doctor to check her out and hopefully medicate her. (Heroic assumption that she will understand any of this, but I am happy she is so out of control that she is doing this in front of witnesses). If she can settle down, we can continue as is, with me just pitching in a little bit for their expenses right now. That would be the best scenario.
Divorce is unlikely to work as long as they are competent, since they won't agree to it, and if they're incompetent, it also won't work. Plus they own a house that I live in and take care of (it was borderline a hoarder house & is much better now, but would still take some time to get in sellable shape) and we'd have to deal with that.
This forum has been so helpful- I am definitely going to update you all about the care team meeting. Hugs to everyone who has read my confused meanderings and shared their hard-won experience!
We talked to him several times about this, to no avail.
He passed before we had to make the move.
My dad has major short-term memory issues (so he is a perfect abuse victim) and mom alternates between telling everyone he has dementia and denying it. I have never seen any reports that abuse/yelling cures this disorder, but you would think she is convinced of that :(
I am an attorney who is trying to make a career change to teaching high school in a high needs urban area. It is very rewarding personally, but definitely not financially. I would rather not walk away from this new path just because mom is crazypants and their care will get very expensive. If they get divorced due to her abuse, I think she should be able to qualify for Medicaid. She would not be able to stay in the AL where she is and dad's costs should be manageable with just a little bit of help from me. I am also wondering if her behavior might be attributable to a UTI due to her hoarding and reusing toilet paper and disposable underwear (eww, but she is very proud of her frugality and also nuts).
Yeah, I will consult a real attorney in due course, but these were just some ideas. It's sad that it has come to this, but I blew up my life once to come and take care of them, I am not doing it again :(
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