My mom is wheelchair bound, has virtual no use of her legs (can't stand) and even her arms are too weak to propel the chair even a little. At 5' tall she weighed 160 lbs. last time she was weighed, two weeks ago in a NH. She is now at home with fulltime CNA care and is gaining weight. She loves food & people are bringing her food she doesn't need to eat! We really need a dietician but there's not one in our area and it's so hard to take her out for long. She knows she'll end up back in the NH if she gets any heavier (one CNA can barely move her due to her weight) which she HATED, but she doesn't want to cut back & can't exercise. She's in denial with her health problems. I'm having trouble searching for caloric intake info. for an immobile elderly person. The Dr. just says "watch it". Can anyone give me some advice?
P.S.- She's telling me I don't care about her because I don't send my 18 yr. old, very strong son to pick her up when she ends up on the floor.
Do the CNAs have bad habits? Do they bring unhealthy food with them to work? I know that might be hard to control BUT it could be very hard on your mom to watch them eat ( or smell the aroma of) foods that she craves but can't have. See if you have any control over that element of her care. Explain the requirements to each person you hire so going in they understand. Once your mom gets control of her emotional eating it won't bother her as much and she won't be as tempted by her friends unhealthy offerings. It really doesn't take that long to stop the cravings once the sugar is cut out and it will help her thinking clear up as well. Comfort eating is a huge problem in our country and a lot of good information is available. Food is a drug. Good luck to the both of you.
If someone brings it to her she WILL eat it.
OK, as I have said before, recovery will all hinge upon her willingness. Get her to an OA meeting. Go with her. You will be surprised.
Someone said to put Mom in the nursing home. I don't have POA nor am I her legal guardian so I don't have the power to do that. The nursing home would be MUCH cheaper than her being home, but home is where she wants to be.
To answer other questions: She is 74 and the physical therapist says that therapy (as in what a therapist could come in & do) will not help her and she is using small arm weights to help her arms.
For the sake of Mom being overweight, it's not her weight that I care about, but the fact that she will be completely bed ridden if she gets any heavier. She still wants to go out shopping, to church, etc. but doesn't seem to understand that she's eating the wrong things. If someone brings it to her she WILL eat it.
She can not walk after having back surgery on 8/26/2015. She was barely able to walk before then with disc trouble starting at L2 all the way down to S1. That was her 2nd back surgery, the 1st was 07/02/2014. She also has severe arthritis in her left arm and can't use it very well. Also, the Dr. said she has had a stroke but she doesn't believe him.
The big so-what is that it isn't just about her. She wants to stay out of the NH, but she's getting to the point where she has trouble walking. Those extra pounds will make it so where she can't walk. But she won't want to go to the NH. She'll want me to bear the load of her binge eating by lifting and wheeling her around. I won't do that, so I try to curb her binge eating for her own good. I know the more she eats, the closer she is to losing her independence.
My mother had an eating disorder and was morbidly obese until her 50s, when she was diagnosed with Type II diabetes. I see what is going on now as just the same eating disorder. It would be irresponsible of me to not do what I can to curb it. If she is bored she can get up and do something. Eating is not the answer to boredom and will decrease the quality of life very quickly. Of course, with diabetes or a tendency toward morbid obesity or heart problems, it can create even more problems. It won't be just the person who is affected. The family and caregivers will be affected, too.
Your mother is wheelchair bound, can't stand up or walk, has little use of her arms. You don't say how old she is, but I suspect she is up there in numbers. You also don't say what her medical condition is that has made her wheelchair bound.
SO WHAT? So she is overweight. SO WHAT? If the aide can't lift her up, there are lifts that can be used. Or get another aide that is stronger. If the only pleasure she has in life is food, then let her have it. While immobile people need far less calories than active people, does it really matter if she is overweight? If the doctor felt that it was a huge problem, I'm sure he/she would have said more about it. It's not like losing weight is going to have her running a marathon, is it? I'm quite sure that being wheelchair bound & having an aide taking care of you is miserable enough----why make her more miserable by restricting her food intake? It's all she has. Give her a break.
I think people get very worked up about things that don't really matter. Look at it from a "whole picture" perspective. Unless losing weight will get her out of the wheelchair and walking again, it doesn't really matter.
And when she ends up on the floor, call the fire department. They will usually send out a couple of firemen who will pick her up & get her back to where she needs to be, whether that be the bed or wheelchair. If the CNA cannot move her, call the agency and get another CNA that can. 5 feet tall and 160 pounds isn't real that obese, believe it or not---especially for someone that is completely immobile.
I knew a man that changed my whole outlook on situations like this, and I will never forget it. He was a medical disaster---a brittle diabetic, took insulin every day, had several fingers and toes amputated. was on dialysis, had barely any heart function because he had several heart attacks, had practically no peripheral circulation, lost his sight & was blind, got around the house with a "Rollator" and went to dialysis on a special bus that came to the door to pick him up. His wife made all his meals for him, check this blood sugar & gave him his insulin. She took care of the ulcers on his feet. Other than for dialysis, he never left the house. He couldn't watch TV anymore, so he had to listen to football games & baseball games on TV. He wasn't able to use the computer because he couldn't see it. He could only listen to the TV when he and his wife would watch movies. A home health nurse came to the house one day, and was doing his intake. She asked him about his diet and what he ate----he told her that at night he has ice cream and other sweet things sometimes. He told her what he ate for meals and what he drank. Th nurse proceeded to give him a whole manifest of why he shouldn't be eating ice cream or sweet things, that he shouldn't be eating & drinking certain things with his meals, etc. He chuckled and said "Listen----take a look at my life. I am blind. I can't walk. I don't get out of the house unless it is to dialysis. I am missing several fingers and toes. My heart is barely functioning. What is my quality of life? I could drop dead the minute you walk out of this house. If I want to have some ice cream, I'm going to have ice cream. I am not afraid to die because my quality of life could not be much worse than it already is. If you were me, and you wanted to have some ice cream, would you have it?" The nurse didn't say anything. I totally agreed with him. I think this situation is probably very similar to that.
Until you can get some professional advice I suspose you could start with the obvious - reduce the amount of processed sugar items. I do know that the elderly generally need fewer calories than a typical healthy adult - even more reason to be sure the calories break down is the appropiate amounts of protein, complex carbohydrates and healthy fats for that specific persons needs.
The suggestions others had about her being in a nursing home is a good one, but that is another issue. Although it probably won't cost much more than the full-time CNA.
elderly fall more at a facilities than anywhere else and loving care is often missing.i am using a hoyer by myself to move my mom at home. she likes sweets. I give her sweets along with a healthy diet
I had the same issue with my father a few years ago, only he needed to gain weight. He was dangerously thin. With the weight loss/gain calculator, I found out how many calories he needed to maintain his present weight at that time, and then added an extra 1,000 calories a day for a consistent two pound weight gain per week. One pound =3,500 calories, so if you shave off 500 calories a day from the amount of calories it takes in order for your mom to maintain her present weight, she should be able to lose 1lb per week. The link I attached should help you. If for some reason it doesn't work. Google weight loss calculator.
You will get good advice about nutrition here but you probably wont' want to hear what I am going to say, namely, you can't do what she is not willing to do. This all depends upon her willingness. If she is a foodie, then she will want the food. You cannot be the food police. It will wear you out very fast and you will receive no thanks for it.
Before you go too far, check our the web sites for Overeaters Anonymous (www.oa.org) and Al-Anon (www.Al-Anon.org). You will discover that there are many thousands out there living with addicts of all kinds who have learned to focus on themselves, fold their hands, and let it go.