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- manage multiple hired caregivers and your LO long distance
- move your LO to a facility where you live and manage her care locally
- care for your LO yourself in your home until you no longer can
There really aren't any other options. Friends, neighbors and churches can only do so much and are ultimately not responsible for her health and safety. Your mom's cognitive condition won't stay the same...it will steadily get worse and you will eventually come to a juncture where you will need to pull the trigger on some decision. You don't want to do it in a crisis. It doesn't really matter what your LO wants if it isn't feasible or realistic. The caregiving arrangement needs to work for BOTH you and your LO or it isn't working. Period.
I was caring for my MIL with short-term memory loss who lived only 6 miles from me. I worked full time and had young kids. I didn't want to stop in to check on her every day because I was busy and didn't think it was necessary. So I'd call her in the morning to make sure she took her meds and ate properly. She promised me she was doing that. When I checked - nope, she wasn't. She wasn't lying...she really thought she had taken her meds and eaten. But her fridge was full of rotting food and there were no signs of her having eaten anything in her garbage or sink (no dirty dishes, no wrappers or containers). Her pill minder had all the days open and the pills scattered everywhere. I had even "walked through" her taking her pills on the phone ("get a glass of water, open Monday, take all the Monday pills"). She wasn't really doing that either. She wasn't able to do it. She had to go into a facility for her own safety. You can hire an agency for now to buy yourself some time but you will need to eventually decide how much time you want to invest in managing. You can't avoid this decision. Dealing with it sooner rather than later avoids a train wreck for the both of you.
Mom lived by her calendar, so when she had an appt coming up, I would start getting calls, every day, every other day, for days before the appt! I did try the "walk through" by asking her to write my name on the calendar where the appt was marked, to indicate I would pick her up. "Yeah." No, not Yeah mom, while I'm on the phone, get a pencil and write it down! You call me every day to ask for a ride, so if you write it down... I would get apologies for bothering me... >sigh< No, it's not a bother, it just helps YOU to know that you have a ride!
For future appts, I made sure to mark them all while I was there for the current one!!
Mom didn't scatter her pills, that I know of, but she would miss the audible alarm along with the flashing. The aides could check it and point it out to her, but as noted in another response, the aides didn't last 2 months before she refused to let them in, because she was "fine, independent and could cook!" The rotted veggies and frozen chicken negated that last one, I already knew the others weren't true!
I should go back to Home Instead and enlist them as allies. The goal is for you and your sister and your area manager to persuade your mother to accept regular support as a condition for her to remain at home. Stress that this is how she gets to stay at home in her house with her dog, and that everyone is on the same side on this.
Remember, it isn't an argument you need to win - it's a developing situation that you can take your time over.
Are the phone calls working to prompt her to take her meds?
We brought in aides 1 hr/day weekdays only, as a sanity check on mom (lived 1.5 hrs away) and to ensure she took her meds from the timed/locked dispenser, with flashing lights and alarm - she would not always take them, so they could check it and ask her to take them (they can't dispense.) We had minimal cameras too, but if she didn't pass through those areas, we'd be blind. The plan was to increase time and assistance as needed, but in less than 2 months, she refused to let them in. We'd also taken the car away and there was no way for her to walk anywhere to get even minimal supplies. The aides couldn't take her, but they could pick up items she needed, like milk and juice, during their hour.
The company sent their "expert" to chat with mom and "convince" her...that woman should be happy mom was over 90 and couldn't pick her up and throw her out! Mom would forget she asked or said something within a matter of minutes, so convincing her of something like this wouldn't have worked. If they live together, you can let them in and do the reminding every day. If they live alone, they'll likely forget agreeing to this and refuse to let the aide in.
I should think this woman either needs someone living with her, family or hired help, her living with family, or she needs to move to a facility. Even if she can be "convinced" to allow the aides, she's likely going to forget, sooner rather than later, then you start all over again. If you could find a good live-in you can trust, it could work, but mom may quickly forget who this person is. Losing short-term memory really puts a damper on changing things.
The dog *may* be okay in a facility - depends on the facility and perhaps the size of the dog. You would have to check around. Mom's MC unit had a cat in one room and a rather large dog in another (eventually they had to insist the dog go, he was really too big to be in there and needed space to be a dog! He wasn't bad, but it really wasn't fair to keep him cooped up.) The AL upstairs has many little dogs living with the residents. I'm sure the IL area has plenty of dogs and cats too.
Then the niece who was closest and most active died a tragic death and all of this began to fall apart. Turns out no one was even calling her every day, much less checking in. It just sort of drifted into a pattern of benign neglect. Finally, she collapsed one night trying to get to the bathroom and could not get up again. Yes, she had one of those buttons she could push and they would call and come out if needed. But she didn’t want to “be a bother”, so she didn’t push it. I’ll spare you the grim details, but this well-groomed former nurse lay there in her own soil for 3 days. Did she shout for help? No. Again, her life was about not being a bother. On day 4, the Visiting Angel came and discovered her and did what was needed to get her to the hospital and call local family. She was severely hydrated and had lost the ability to feed herself or write her name, could barely use her hands at all, etc.
She went into rehab and recovered some functioning. She was very happy in rehab and would have been content to stay there, but Medicare only allowed 30 days or so. Her second choice was to go back to her apartment, which she loved, and live there. It was a one-bedroom, so even though she was willing to have a room mate who would keep an eye on her, that was not feasible. After trying a few AL’s, it became clear she was not adapting but was rather feeling that she had been abandoned in the hands of strangers who, we discovered, were not very diligent in her care. Finally, she moved in with my husband and me, several states away. She made that transition well, but required 24-hour-a-day availability even though she was also independent in many ways (occasional hallucinations, etc). We cared for her for the final 9 years of her life. I tell you all this as background to what will be an unconventional point of view.
When you say your mother only wants to live in her house with her dog for the rest of her life, my response is “then let her do that, but use the liaison suggested by MyCalling”. They can check in and be there to make arrangements before an “incident” turns into a “crisis”. Wish we had known about liaisons. Even though my Mom loved me and my husband, she never stopped deeply missing her independent living situation. In many ways (particularly with the low level of care she received in the AL’s we explored) she was experiencing what, to her, was “a fate worse than death”. She was a very committed and active Christian and was absolutely not afraid of death; almost welcomed it. The older I get (I’m 72 now), the more empathy I feel for that desire to just be left alone for come what may. I hope my children do NOT do for me what I did for Mom in the name of caring. We cared for her for 9 years and don’t regret a moment of it. But I often wonder if it would have been better to just get a DNR and allow Mom to live happily in her community of seniors with a daily welfare check. The situation you are facing is one that can rip you apart. But my “hindsight” wishes for Mom would be to make the apartment situation work in some way. I had not seen her happier or more involved in 10 years. I have begun to think deeply about why we are so addicted to “keeping people alive”, even when quality of life is gone, but the healthy physical body keeps going like the Energizer bunny. Give me quality of life with minimal “supervision” please. Maybe your Mom feels the same.
There comes a point where Its not sustainable. For you like most of us, it will take a crisis to force the issue of moving to a facility or getting in home care. Your the parent now. You have to protect her whether she likes it or not.
I put 60 thousand miles on my car making the trip home for each crisis. I’m mid 60s and those 12 hour drives were not easy.
You’re not likely to get mom to agree to anything but at some point you quit asking and start doing what has to be done. For me it was a big hot mess getting my folks into assisted living but they adjusted after awhile and I started to get my life back. I had developed pretty serious A Fib during all this. Just had my annual physical and it has abated very very nicely.
Good luck figuring out the next step to keep your mom safe.
Unfortunately all it takes is 1 incident that will send her to the ER. If she is found in time..
With dementia you can never tell what is going to happen when. She could decide that she needs something from the store and wanders off..
She could slip on the floor, slip in the bathroom..what happens if she is on the floor for 12 hours, 24, or more? Would she recover?
I hate to be a downer on this but it is a bit of reality.
If mom has a diagnosis of dementia her doctor could state that she is not safe living alone. That would give you some ammunition for a full time caregiver or a move.