My 78 year old mother was staying in one after being in the nursing home to recover from a broken hip. Three doctors said she should stay there forever, due to her continued decline from prior strokes and her dementia and inability to walk (she refused to use walker and fell constantly). But, she had the financial resources to afford a home health aide daily, and I was busy setting that up (along with a medic alert system, which she refused to use at the AL facility). However, she got more and more angry, and demanding to come home STAT, and apparently she had been approached by an employee there (dishwasher on night shift, NO medical training) the minute she was admitted, and made arrangements for that woman to "take care of her." Against my wishes as her POA of four years (with an impeccable record of honest dealings and lots of witnesses to my constant care and concern for her needs), she returned home, and then screamed at me to "get the hell out of her life and leave her the hell alone!!!". This nasty woman "caregiver" (who was clinging to her, and petting her, and cooing in her ear during it - gross!) also told me to stay away, and has encouraged my mother to continue her increasing hatred ever since. The first week, I asked the police to let me go in to check on mom, and asked them to run a criminal background check on the woman, which was clean. But the woman immediately had a lawyer come to my mom's home to revoke my POA (which caused my mom to lose a huge lawsuit I was handling for her, since this person wouldn't return any of the attorney's calls and found ways to keep them away from my mom). She replaced me as POA, and immediately went to the bank to assign herself to my mom's accounts then started withdrawing funds. I was still aware of this, as she was too stupid to realize I'd had joint signature accounts and had online access to activity. She has since changed her social security auto-deposit to a different account that she opened. Mom didn't have a huge amount of money, maybe $17,000 in savings and $3000/month Social Security, and I don't want or need her money (I still work). I also don't care about her antiques, paintings, and fine jewelry, but I'm betting this woman does! My main concern is that her bills won't get paid, or that her Medicare supplemental will be allowed to lapse (which would be horrible - she has a great policy). I have no way of knowing any of this now, because the Privacy Acts will not allow anyone to tell me things without bein POA. Anyway, after calls to Adult Protective Services, the Indiana State Board of Health, and discussions with the Police Officer, I found that she is not breaking any laws! The Assisted Living facility said they do not have a policy against moonlightling and cannot do anything to the employee, although they have since discovered that others there are doing it too. Also, as long as my mom can be questioned and say to the Police or whoever "this is what I want" then they cannot do anything. I'm just wondering if anyone else has gone through this, and also wonder how I can make people aware of the hazards of Assisted Living employees in these situations!!! The neurologist says that my mom's particular type of dementia causes confabulation disorder, and because of her "intact sensorium," she can easily fake her way through conversations, seeming as competent as anyone on a superficial level. She can describe a movie plot or hold a conversation and sound fine, but can get lost within her own home or forget what happened two minutes ago. Strange stuff, but I did not want to take the risk of pursuing guardianship and possibly losing a few thousand dollars while she convinced the Judge everything was great. The doctor said they never listen to him. If my mother had not developed such a strong hatred for me right after she broke her hip, and "Evil Daughter" forced her go to the hospital in an ambulance (she wanted me to "leave her alone; she would be fine," even though she'd been sitting in her urine for 12 hours when I found her), then it might be worth it to keep trying to protect her. Before that fateful day of the broken hip and surgery/nursing home rehab (this place is full of old people!!!"), I served her needs constantly and only did the best for her, which she well knew. Then, I was the best thing since sliced bread! But, I wasn;t shocked by the sudden flip; she was a horrible narcissist mother, as bad as it gets, so I am over it now - had a sort of breakdown at first from having her scream in my face to go away, but I've moved on, mostly. I'm just wanting to know how we can change this for the future - I believe that Assisted Living facilities need to be forced to follow some rules about employees. I realize that they are technically "apartments" and self-paid, and that I could go in there and make friends and sell them fake stocks tomorrow, but I think the employees shouldn't be shooting fish in a barrel and making money off of these scams.
Speaking of car sales, my mom had a car dealer who sold her a new car for $35,000 one year after he sold her the same car in a different color, and he gave her $10,000 in trade-in on the thing (it had less than 5000 miles on it). Then he did it again. Again, no law against it, according to Indiana Attorney General - in fact, she wanted to rescind when I explained the papers and her trade-in amount on the second time, and you can't do that in Indiana! One you buy a car, you don't get three days to back out of that contract. They also sold her a $2800 "maintenance package" for oil changes, etc., which she never used once. So I know about unscrupulous business dealings too! Someone sold her a new roof for $20,000 then didn't stagger the shingles correctly (so they could use less), another charged her $7000 for a new off-brand furnace and $1000 for a new cheapo water heater, another charged her $1000 to remove a small locust tree hit by lightning (took an hour, and I could have done it with an electric chain saw and practically pulled the stump by hand). This was constant with her, if the guy was "so nice!" etc. She always fell for a schmoozer in two seconds flat. I am stunned by the lack of laws to protect elderly people from fraud. In fact, I wish I could set up some stings and go really crazy on this so it was brought to light constantly. I also would love to know if (or when) this little scam artist ALF employee's mother is in an ALF, so I can go invite her to come live with me and prevent her from seeing her evil daughter, and become her mom's POA. Now, THAT would work, I'll bet - not to mention be a barrel of monkeys!
Also, to CatTails, the "Guido" thing made me laugh! I'm so glad nobody can read my mind, because my revenge fantasies are pretty creepy. But, it helps somehow, and lucky for the woman, I would never carry them out,
This whole thing was hard emotionally and has taken huge hunks of my time for the last four years (I took care of 100% of her business), so now I have to focus on my job, and have no interest in being my mother's guardian (especially since she wants me "the HELL out of her life!!!"). But would be happy if the court appointed one, so that she could have real home health aides and be taken to a doctor when needed, etc.
I don't think this little idiot scammer knows about "Healthcare Representative" forms, so if my mom ends up having another stroke and important decisions need to be made, I still have that - unless her friendly attorney thought to do that too. Which means she can make choices that might speed up my mom's death and benefitting from any new Will she had written! Sad, sad world. I see you are an RN, so (like me) you've seen a lot of this stuff. We'll be seeing more; everyone's getting older, as am I, and we live in a world of increasing dishonesty and greed. This whole thing has made me plan to NOT be like my mother by planning ahead as much as possible.
situation . Don't forget to contact the elder abuse hotline in your area. There may be gerontologists at the local teaching hospital able to help with her assessment as well. Don't get discouraged. Good luck.
I have been in touch with the Attorney General, and they verify what the attorneys and Adult Protective Services and Board of Health said, that there is no law preventing this. They did encourage me to file a report, which I did. To be fair, the AL facility is NOT happy about this, and they provided excellent service in all other ways. Their attached nursing home has a 5-star Medicare rating (a big deal), and very high marks from the State of Indiana also. They agree that the laws need to be changed, and their Executive Director has been very helpful and encouraging about my efforts. The Indiana State Board of Health said they will discuss it with them further at their next visit, but I agreee, what needs to happen now is a letter to my legislators. It's not about my mom so much anymore, as finding a huge crack in the system that I myself work within, and wanting to get it fixed before it gets any wider!!! Also, as a final point, I'm not sure it is the local Judge who is the problem so much as the fact that MDs will not come to court, and often won't even submit a doctor's report to the court (and visit transcripts aren't enough; has to be the official "forms"). To be fair, the Neurologist she was sent to by the nursing home was one of the best in the state, and he is beyond busy. Even so, he was very supportive - he just said that he used to go to court when he had time, but got tired of Judges knowing more than him about medicine and patient prognosis, and not listening to his opinion. As I know from handling my mother's lawsuit, they can be very arbitrary, so I'm very paranoid.Anyway, thanks again for the comments and please help me get the word out to others with parents enetering (even short-term) Assisted Living.
I understand that you have accepted what has happened where your mom is concerned and I'm glad you have. I would so support your efforts to keep this from happening to other seniors. It really is deplorable. Good luck and thank you for sharing your story. Cattails
and my gut feeling is this AL facility has a bigger group of scams going on - like extreme overbilling or billing for non existent items. Your mom isn't the first I bet to have this happen