Right now trying to sort out the best course of action. I am so burnt out caring for my Mother who is in what I think is her seventh year of dementia. I have been caring for her for five years. I have followed the post here and other web sites about different solutions. I have read over and over that people who have dementia seem okay with being put into memory care facilities allowing their children and or caregivers to walk away without guilt.
That is just not what I am experiencing. My Mother is scared. She asks me over and over what is wrong with her. She is aware that her mind is not working correctly. I try my hardest to keep the tone of my voice friendly but sometimes when answering the same question over and over I snap. When that happens she says, Why are you so mean to me? God, I am not mean at all but confess to be inpatient at times. One minute she says I never wanted you to take care of me and the next accuses me of trying to get rid of her. And in the next breath will ask me Is this my house and praise me for being a good sister. I am her daughter.
I am looking for solutions, investigating day care, hiring a companion or God forbid putting her in a long term care facility. To complicate things further I am also having memory issues. It scares me to make decisions for her when my own judgement is impaired.
Sorry, just venting I guess.
For those of you who have faced these issues I am just wondering when will she be happy and unconcerned with her decline?
Grace + Peace,
Bob
Finances permitting, the first thing is getting an aide to come in for at least 3 hours per day. Have them do all the morning care and breakfast. You leave the house for some "me time". Recharge your batteries.
Above all should not look at going into a skilled home for care as failure or neglect on your part. At this point your mother has reached the point I believe you are asking about. You just may not see it. The fact she does not know who you are is rather telling.
One other thing. We speak of the here and now, but remember it only gets worse.
I am sorry if I sound to clinical, but as a home nurse I have seen this over and over and it is my best advice.
In this short time, despite tremendous guilt, I have come to the conclusion that I can't continue to put my entire life on hold for her. I've got two teens still at home, and a husband who are all taking a back seat...never mind me. Never mind having friends over, or going out to dinner with my husband, or sleeping in, or going to visit other family out of town or taking my daughter to the golf course, or going to work...etc etc.etc.
I am going to place my Mom, "doctors orders" for some "memory therapy" into a local memory care place five minutes down the road and cross my fingers she adjusts.
If she realized how I have put my entire life on hold, I don't think she'd want me to continue.
Somehow I will have to deal with the guilt....
If you can afford to hire help at home then do so - you may find you will need to try several out before finding the right one - agencies can run about $20/hour with a 20 hour / week min. If you hire on your own then you will need to cover social security taxes and workers comp insurance
Are you the sole caregiver for your mom?
1. Is it safe for your loved one in your home. Can you bathe them & assist with showers and personal hygiene?
2. Are there a whole bunch of activities in your home to keep them busy, occupied, socialized & amused?
3. Are you home to cook 3 hot meals a day?
4. Are you able to administer various medications at various times of day?
5. Are you able to order prescription medicines and manage that whole mess?
If your loved one were to fall, as happens quite frequently, are you equipped to take vital signs and determine whether they need hospital care or not?
The list goes on and on. My father fell & broke his hip about 2 years ago. I had no other choice but to place both of my folks into an ALF so they could be properly cared for, and I stress the word 'properly.' I am not strong enough to help a 170 lb man to the bathroom, nor would he want me to. I was managing my mother's 12 prescriptions, which turned into a part-time job. Not to mention, I couldn't be sure SHE was taking them properly. My dad passed away last June, and my mother probably would prefer to be living with me, but she's been at the ALF the entire time. When I start feeling guilty, I remind myself that I cannot administer the kind of care over HERE that they are administering over THERE. Nor can I provide entertainment and socialization with other widowed women who all use walkers & tell the same story over & over again all day long. :)
My mother (89) has been going down the dementia road for a few years now, and it's gotten pretty bad lately. She's fallen down at least 5x while at the ALF, and each time, the staff rushed in to assess her. I hired a geriatric doctor who's in the ALF every Tuesday, and her NP is there on Thursdays. When mom came down with pneumonia, she was diagnosed immediately, put on antibiotics immediately, and thereby avoided hospitalization & recuperated in one week, which is truly a miracle. She's now signed up for the spa program, and is assisted with a luxurious spa bath once a week. I have a bathtub in my house that would be impossible for her to get into, never mind out of. The shower in the ALF is specially equipped for handicapped usage, and once she's wheelchair bound (which isn't all that far off), the staff can wheel her right into the stall. I can't do that.
In fact, I can't do 90% of what they can do for her. And so, I leave it to others who are qualified. I am in constant contact with the staff and the doctor at the ALF, and when I see her enjoying her time, I slap myself in the head for ever feeling guilty.
When the time comes for her to move into memory care, it's right across the parking lot.
I really think caregivers need to stop the torment, and do what's right for ALL concerned. If you can't afford a private ALF, then Medicaid can kick in. There are now lots of 'private homes' that have been turned into ALFs, and only take like 6 residents (and many are Medicaid approved). Every resident has their own bedroom, and they all eat meals together in the dining room every day. They keep one another company, and that allays many fears at the same time it keeps them occupied & social.
Best of luck to you on your journey to finding the right answer. I just hope you don't allow misplaced guilt to drive your decision.
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